Interacting Dirac fermions under a spatially alternating pseudomagnetic field: Realization of spontaneous quantum Hall effect
Both topological crystalline insulator surfaces and graphene host multivalley massless Dirac fermions which are not pinned to a high-symmetry point of the Brillouin zone. Strain couples to the low-energy electrons as a time-reversal-invariant gauge field, leading to the formation of pseudo-Landau-le...
Main Authors: | , |
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Other Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
American Physical Society,
2016-05-24T14:44:24Z.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Summary: | Both topological crystalline insulator surfaces and graphene host multivalley massless Dirac fermions which are not pinned to a high-symmetry point of the Brillouin zone. Strain couples to the low-energy electrons as a time-reversal-invariant gauge field, leading to the formation of pseudo-Landau-levels (PLLs). Here we study periodic pseudomagnetic fields originating from strain superlattices. We study the low-energy Dirac PLL spectrum induced by the strain superlattice and analyze the effect of various polarized states. Through self-consistent Hartree-Fock calculations we establish that, due to the strain superlattice and PLL electronic structure, a valley-ordered state spontaneously breaking time reversal and realizing a quantum Hall phase is favored, while others are suppressed. Our analysis applies to both topological crystalline insulators and graphene. NWO of the Netherlands David & Lucile Packard Foundation |
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