correlation effects in topological phase transitions

ORAL

Abstract

We study topological insulators/trivial insulators topological phase transitions in the Kane-Mele-Hubbard model using the projective quantum Monte Carlo method. We numerically compute the topological invariants and study topological phase transitions under correlation. We find that quantum fluctuation effects from interactions can act both to stabilize and destabilize topological phases, depending on the details of the model. When the one-body terms break the lattice symmetry, e.g. bond dimerization breaks the rotational symmetry in the Kane-Mele model, the Hubbard interaction destabilizes the topological insulator phase. On the other hand, when the one-body terms (e.g. the third-nearest neighbor hopping) preserves the lattice symmetry, the interaction stabilizes the topological phase.

*This work was supported by ARO Grant No. W911NF- 09-1-0527, NSF Grant No. DMR-0955778, and by grant W911NF-12-1-0573 from the Army Research Office with funding from the DARPA OLE Program.

Authors

  • Hsiang-Hsuan Hung

    • Department of Physics, The University of Texas at Austin
  • Victor Chua

    • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
    • Department of Physics, The University of Texas at Austin
  • Lei Wang

    • Theoretische Physik, ETH Zurich
  • Gregory A. Fiete

    • University of Texas at Austin
    • Department of Physics, The University of Texas at Austin
    • The University of Texas at Austin