<i>2N</i>-rule: Searching topological phases and robust edge modes in carbon nanotubes
ORAL
Abstract
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) can be generally classified to two phases, metal or insulator, depending on their tube indexes. So far, the insulating CNTs are considered identical apart for some quantitative gap difference. However, here we show that the insulating phases may be topologically nonequivalent. We theoretically report an explicit and robust scheme, 2N-rule, for systematically searching topological phases in CNTs of all diameters. By investigating the topological Zak phase based on both analytical model and first-principles approaches, such a 2N-rule of insulating CNT(n,0) is generally established: when n = 2N where N is an integer, it is a topological insulator; otherwise, it is a normal insulator. For finite-length topological CNTs, topologically protected quantum modes naturally occur at the tube ends, which hold significant robustness against external environment perturbations, taking advantage over fragile edge states in conventional systems.
*This work was financially supported by the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and the Fonds de recherche du Quebec – Nature et technologies of the Province of Quebec (H.G.). We thank the Compute Canada and the High Performance Computing Center of McGill University for substantial computational support.
–
Presenters
-
Chen Hu
- McGill Univ
- Physics, McGill University