4.6 Article

Interacting fermions on the honeycomb bilayer: From weak to strong coupling

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 82, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.82.205106

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [DMR-0955561]
  2. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  3. Division Of Materials Research [0955561] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Many-body instabilities of the half-filled honeycomb bilayer are studied using weak-coupling renormalization group (RG) as well as strong-coupling expansion. For spinless fermions and assuming parabolic degeneracy, there are four independent four-fermion contact couplings. While the dominant instability depends on the microscopic values of the couplings, the broken symmetry state is typically a gapped insulator with either broken inversion symmetry or broken time-reversal symmetry, with a quantized anomalous Hall effect. Under certain conditions, the dominant instability may appear in the particle-particle (pairing) channel. For some nongeneric fine-tuned initial conditions, weak-coupling RG trajectories flow into the noninteracting fixed point, although generally we find runaway flows which we associate with ordering tendencies. Additionally, a tight-binding model with nearest-neighbor hopping and nearest-neighbor repulsion is studied in weak and strong couplings and in each regime a gapped phase with inversion symmetry breaking is found. In the strong-coupling limit, the ground-state wave function is constructed for vanishing in-plane hopping but finite interplane hopping, which explicitly displays the broken inversion symmetry and a finite difference between the number of particles on the two layers. Finally, we discuss the spin-1/2 case and use Fierz identities to show that the number of independent four-fermion contact couplings is 9. The corresponding RG equations in the spin-1/2 case are also presented, and used to show that, just as in strong coupling, the most dominant weak-coupling instability of the repulsive Hubbard model (at half filling) is an antiferromagnet.

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