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Interacting Majorana modes at surfaces of noncentrosymmetric superconductors

Janna E. Rückert, Gergő Roósz, and Carsten Timm
Phys. Rev. B 101, 024519 – Published 29 January 2020

Abstract

Noncentrosymmetric superconductors with line nodes are expected to possess topologically protected flat zero-energy bands of surface states, which can be described as Majorana modes. We here investigate their fate if residual interactions beyond BCS theory are included. For a minimal square-lattice model with a plaquette interaction, we find stringlike integrals of motion that form Clifford algebras and lead to exact degeneracies. These degeneracies strongly depend on whether the numbers of sites in the x and y directions are even or odd and are robust against disorder in the interactions. We show that the mapping of the Majorana model onto two decoupled spin compass models [Y. Kamiya et al., Phys. Rev. B 98, 161409(R) (2018)] and extra spectator degrees of freedom only works for open boundary conditions. The mapping shows that the three-leg and four-leg Majorana ladders are integrable, while systems of larger width are not. In addition, the mapping maximally reduces the effort for exact diagonalization, which is utilized to obtain the gap above the ground states. We find that this gap remains open if one dimension is kept constant and even, while the other is sent to infinity, at least if that dimension is odd. Moreover, we compare the topological properties of the interacting Majorana model to those of the toric-code model. The Majorana model has long-range entangled ground states that differ by Z2 fluxes through the system on a torus. The ground states exhibit string condensation similar to the toric code but the topological order is not robust. While the spectrum is gapped—due to spontaneous symmetry breaking inherited from the compass models—states with different values of the Z2 fluxes end up in the ground-state sector in the thermodynamic limit. Hence, the gap does not protect these fluxes against weak perturbations.

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  • Received 13 November 2019

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.101.024519

©2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Janna E. Rückert, Gergő Roósz, and Carsten Timm*

  • Institute of Theoretical Physics, Technische Universität Dresden, 01062 Dresden, Germany

  • *carsten.timm@tu-dresden.de

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Issue

Vol. 101, Iss. 2 — 1 January 2020

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