Manipulation of Dirac points in two-dimensional crystals
Tuesday 10 January 2012 at 3pm
Room "Rémy Lemaire" K 223 (1st floor) Building K, Institut Néel / CNRS
Gilles MONTAMBAUX (Laboratoire de Physique des Solides,Orsay)

I consider several examples of 2D crystals where the low energy properties can be described with a 2 x 2 Hamiltonian with a spectrum exhibiting several Dirac cones. These cones are characterized by a linear dispersion relation, but more importantly by a topological number, or “charge”, related to a Berry phase associated to the spinorial structure of the wave function. For example, the graphene spectrum has a pair of Dirac cones with opposite Berry phases (±π). We study under which conditions these Dirac cones can be manipulated, created or suppressed, through a modification of band parameters, under the condition of conservation of the total “charge”.
We have
found two universal scenarios: [1] The merging of Dirac points with
opposite “charges” constitutes a topological transition between a
semi-metallic phase and a band insulator, with a remarkable “semi-Dirac”
spectrum at the transition: it is linear in one direction and
quadratic in the other.[2] A pair of Dirac points with same charge can
also merge into a single point with double charge 2π, characterized by a
gapless quadratic spectrum. This transition occurs in twisted graphene
bilayers. For both types of merging, we derive a universal Hamiltonian
that describes continuously the coupling between valleys. We find a
general scaling law for the Landau energy levels which the magnetic
field, we calculate the number of zero energy modes and we compare the
exact spectrum with its semiclassical approximation. The case of
strained bilayer is particularly interesting since the spectrum exhibits
a pair of four Dirac points can be manipulated under strain. Different
types of merging can occur.
Finally, I will briefly discuss a
recent experiment in cold atoms which has recently detected the merging
of Dirac points and whose results agree perfectly with our predictions.
[1] A universal Hamiltonian for the motion
and the merging of Dirac cones in a two-dimensional crystal, G.
Montambaux, F. Piéchon, J.-N. Fuchs and M.O. Goerbig, Eur. Phys. J. B
72, 509 (2009)
[2] Merging of Dirac points in a two-dimensional crystal, G. Montambaux, F. Piéchon, J.-N. Fuchs and M.O. Goerbig, Phys. Rev. B 80, 153412 (2009)





