DCMPMS Seminars
Hyperbolic lattices: From Hofstadter Butterfly to Experimentally Realizable Cayley crystal decomposition
by Dr. Lavi Kumar Upreti (University of Konstanz, Germany)
Thursday, July 4, 2024
from
to
(Asia/Kolkata)
at D 406
at D 406
Description |
Hyperbolic lattices, characterized by negative curvature and non-commutative translations, offer a rich playground for exploring exotic electronic states. This talk explores these systems through a multifaceted approach, bridging theory and experiment. We begin with a concise introduction to hyperbolic lattices and then move to the results to present curvature-dependent Hofstadter butterfly spectrum in the presence of a magnetic field; we acknowledge the experimental challenges in directly realizing these structures. We introduce an indirect approach that decomposes the problem with hyperbolic lattices into two parts: curvature and non-commutative geometry. This method breaks down hyperbolic lattices into curved Euclidean lattices (amenable to strain engineering in graphene) and simpler non-Abelian Z 2 lattices generated by non-commuting translations (Cayley crystals). In the first case, we investigate topological states in curved graphene, leveraging Kitaev's real-space index to characterize their behavior. Finally, in the end, I will present our very recent findings (still under progress), revealing two distinct classes of states within these Z 2 lattices: Abelian states exhibiting conventional behavior and non-Abelian states experiencing a surprising Hall drift motion under an electric field. This intriguing result suggests the presence of an effective internal magnetic field in the non-Abelian sector, opening exciting avenues for investigating novel physical phenomena. |