论文标题
相关校正的带拓扑和拓扑表面状态在基于铁的超导体中
Correlation-corrected band topology and topological surface states in iron-based superconductors
论文作者
论文摘要
基于铁的超导体为研究拓扑超导性和Majoraana fermions提供了理想的平台。在本文中,我们使用密度功能理论(DFT)和动态平均场理论的组合对许多基于铁的超导体的谱带拓扑和拓扑表面状态进行了全面研究。我们发现,Fe 3D电子的强电子相关性在确定基于铁的超导体的带拓扑和拓扑表面状态方面起着至关重要的作用。电子相关性不仅强烈重新赋予了Fe 3D电子的带宽,而且还可以移动Fe 3D和AS/SE P电子的频带位置。结果,电子相关性移动了许多基于铁的超导体的DFT计算的拓扑表面状态,更接近费米水平,这对于实现拓扑超导向表面状态和观察Majorana零模式以及实现实际应用,例如量子计算,这至关重要。更重要的是,电子相关性可以改变谱带拓扑,并使某些基于铁的超导体在拓扑表面状态下拓扑不一致,而在DFT计算中,它们具有琐碎的带拓扑,没有拓扑表面状态。我们的论文表明,重要的是要考虑电子相关效应,以便准确确定基于铁的超导体和其他强相关材料的带拓扑和拓扑表面状态。
Iron-based superconductors offer an ideal platform for studying topological superconductivity and Majorana fermions. In this paper, we carry out a comprehensive study of the band topology and topological surface states of a number of iron-based superconductors using a combination of density functional theory (DFT) and dynamical mean field theory. We find that the strong electronic correlation of Fe 3d electrons plays a crucial role in determining the band topology and topological surface states of iron-based superconductors. Electronic correlation not only strongly renormalizes the bandwidth of Fe 3d electrons, but also shifts the band positions of both Fe 3d and As/Se p electrons. As a result, electronic correlation moves the DFT-calculated topological surface states of many iron-based superconductors much closer to the Fermi level, which is crucial for realizing topological superconducting surface states and observing Majorana zero modes as well as achieving practical applications, such as quantum computation. More importantly, electronic correlation can change the band topology and make some iron-based superconductors topologically nontrivial with topological surface states whereas they have trivial band topology and no topological surface states in DFT calculations. Our paper demonstrates that it is important to take into account electronic correlation effects in order to accurately determine the band topology and topological surface states of iron-based superconductors and other strongly correlated materials.