4.8 Article

Hofstadter Topology: Noncrystalline Topological Materials at High Flux

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 125, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.236804

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Energy [desc0016239]
  2. Schmidt Fund for Innovative Research, Simons Investigator Grant [404513]
  3. Packard Foundation
  4. National Science Foundation EAGER [DMR1643312, NSF-MRSEC DMR-1420541]
  5. BSF Israel US foundation [2018226]
  6. ONR [N00014-201-2303]

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The Hofstadter problem is the lattice analog of the quantum Hall effect and is the paradigmatic example of topology induced by an applied magnetic field. Conventionally, the Hofstadter problem involves adding similar to 10(4) T magnetic fields to a trivial band structure. In this Letter, we show that when a magnetic field is added to an initially topological band structure, a wealth of possible phases emerges. Remarkably, we find topological phases that cannot be realized in any crystalline insulators. We prove that threading magnetic flux through a Hamiltonian with a nonzero Chern number or mirror Chem number enforces a phase transition at fixed filling and that a 2D Hamiltonian with a nontrivial Kane-Mele invariant can be classified as a 3D topological insulator (TI) or 3D weak TI phase in periodic flux. We then study fragile topology protected by the product of twofold rotation and time reversal and show that there exists a higher order TI phase where corner modes are pumped by flux. We show that a model of twisted bilayer graphene realizes this phase. Our results rely primarily on the magnetic translation group that exists at rational values of the flux. The advent of Moire lattices renders our work relevant experimentally. Due to the enlarged Moire unit cell, it is possible for laboratory-strength fields to reach one flux per plaquette and allow access to our proposed Hofstadter topological phase.

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