arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2108.08526 [cond-mat.dis-nn]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Renormalization group analysis of Dirac fermions with random mass

Zhiming Pan, Tong Wang, Tomi Ohtsuki, Ryuichi Shindou

Published 2021-08-19Version 1

Two-dimensional (2D) disordered superconductor (SC) in class D exhibits a disorder-induced quantum multicritical phenomenon among diffusive thermal metal (DTM), topological superconductor (TS), and conventional localized (AI) phases. To characterize the quantum tricritical point where these three phases meet, we carry out a two-loop renormalization group (RG) analysis for 2D Dirac fermion with random mass in terms of the $\epsilon$-expansion in the spatial dimension $d=2-\epsilon$. In 2D ($\epsilon=0$), the random mass is marginally irrelevant around a clean-limit fixed point of the gapless Dirac fermion, while there exists an IR unstable fixed point at finite disorder strength that corresponds to the tricritical point. The critical exponent, dynamical exponent, and scaling dimension of the (uniform) mass term are evaluated around the tricritical point by the two-loop RG analysis. Using a mapping between an effective theory for the 2D random-mass Dirac fermion and the (1+1)-dimensional Gross-Neveu model, we further deduce the four-loop evaluation of the critical exponent, and the scaling dimension of the uniform mass around the tricritical point. Both the two-loop and four-loop results suggest that criticalities of a AI-DTM transition line as well as TS-DTM transition line are controlled by other saddle-point fixed point(s) at finite uniform mass.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2306.14965 [cond-mat.dis-nn] (Published 2023-06-26)
Renormalization Group Analysis of the Anderson Model on Random Regular Graphs
arXiv:cond-mat/0603195 (Published 2006-03-08, updated 2006-08-22)
Stability of fixed points in the (4+ε)-dimensional random field O(N) spin model for sufficiently large N
arXiv:1106.1565 [cond-mat.dis-nn] (Published 2011-06-08, updated 2011-09-07)
Tricritical point in heterogeneous k-core percolation