4.5 Article

Coulomb interaction effects on the Majorana states in quantum wires

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 26, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/26/17/172203

Keywords

Majorana states; quantum wire; Coulomb effects

Funding

  1. Icelandic Research Fund [10000802]
  2. National Science Foundation [PHY11-25915]
  3. WV Higher Education Policy Commission Research Challenge Grant [HEPC.dsr.12.29]

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The stability of the Majorana modes in the presence of a repulsive interaction is studied in the standard semiconductor wire-metallic superconductor configuration. The effects of short-range Coulomb interaction, which is incorporated using a purely repulsive delta-function to model the strong screening effect due to the presence of the superconductor, are determined within a Hartree-Fock approximation of the effective Bogoliubov-De Gennes Hamiltonian that describes the low-energy physics of the wire. Through a numerical diagonalization procedure we obtain interaction corrections to the single particle eigenstates and calculate the extended topological phase diagram in terms of the chemical potential and the Zeeman energy. We find that, for a fixed Zeeman energy, the interaction shifts the phase boundaries to a higher chemical potential, whereas for a fixed chemical potential this shift can occur either at lower or higher Zeeman energies. These effects can be interpreted as a renormalization of the g-factor due to the interaction. The minimum Zeeman energy needed to realize Majorana fermions decreases with the increasing strength of the Coulomb repulsion. Furthermore, we find that in wires with multi-band occupancy this effect can be enhanced by increasing the chemical potential, i.e. by occupying higher energy bands.

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