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Topological insulators and superconductors: Tenfold way and dimensional hierarchy

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors constructed representatives of topological insulators and superconductors for all five classes and in arbitrary spatial dimension d, in terms of Dirac Hamiltonians.
Abstract
It has recently been shown that in every spatial dimension there exist precisely five distinct classes of topological insulators or superconductors. Within a given class, the different topological sectors can be distinguished, depending on the case, by a or a topological invariant. This is an exhaustive classification. Here we construct representatives of topological insulators and superconductors for all five classes and in arbitrary spatial dimension d, in terms of Dirac Hamiltonians. Using these representatives we demonstrate how topological insulators (superconductors) in different dimensions and different classes can be related via 'dimensional reduction' by compactifying one or more spatial dimensions (in 'Kaluza–Klein'-like fashion). For -topological insulators (superconductors) this proceeds by descending by one dimension at a time into a different class. The -topological insulators (superconductors), on the other hand, are shown to be lower-dimensional descendants of parent -topological insulators in the same class, from which they inherit their topological properties. The eightfold periodicity in dimension d that exists for topological insulators (superconductors) with Hamiltonians satisfying at least one reality condition (arising from time-reversal or charge-conjugation/particle–hole symmetries) is a reflection of the eightfold periodicity of the spinor representations of the orthogonal groups SO(N) (a form of Bott periodicity). Furthermore, we derive for general spatial dimensions a relation between the topological invariant that characterizes topological insulators and superconductors with chiral symmetry (i.e., the winding number) and the Chern–Simons invariant. For lower-dimensional cases, this formula relates the winding number to the electric polarization (d=1 spatial dimensions) or to the magnetoelectric polarizability (d=3 spatial dimensions). Finally, we also discuss topological field theories describing the spacetime theory of linear responses in topological insulators (superconductors) and study how the presence of inversion symmetry modifies the classification of topological insulators (superconductors).

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Citations
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Interacting symmetry-protected topological phases out of equilibrium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make use of concepts and methods from the theory of topological phases to understand the dynamics of generic quantum many-body systems undergoing unitary time-evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-dimensional topological magnon systems

TL;DR: In this article, the concept of topological magnon systems was introduced, which are bosonic generalizations of three-dimensional topological insulators, and the notion of pseudo-time-reversal symmetry was introduced to measure the presence or absence of symmetry-protected surface states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bulk–edge correspondence, spectral flow and Atiyah–Patodi–Singer theorem for the Z2-invariant in topological insulators

TL;DR: In this article, the spectral flow of a single-parameter family of 1 + 1 -dimensional Dirac operators with a global boundary condition induced by the Kramers degeneracy of the system was studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clifford modules and symmetries of topological insulators

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors complete the classification of symmetry constraints on gapped quadratic fermion hamiltonians proposed by Kitaev, and prove a one-to-one correspondence between the ten Altland-Zirnbauer symmetry classes of Fermion systems and the ten Morita equivalence classes of real and complex Clifford algebras.
Journal ArticleDOI

Edge insulating topological phases in a two-dimensional superconductor with long-range pairing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the zero-temperature phase diagram of a two-dimensional square lattice loaded by spinless fermions, with nearest-neighbor hopping and algebraically decaying pairing, and found that for sufficiently long-range pairing, new phases occur, not continuously connected with any short-range phase and not belonging to the standard families of topological insulators/superconductors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Absence of Diffusion in Certain Random Lattices

TL;DR: In this article, a simple model for spin diffusion or conduction in the "impurity band" is presented, which involves transport in a lattice which is in some sense random, and in them diffusion is expected to take place via quantum jumps between localized sites.
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Quantum spin Hall effect in graphene

TL;DR: Graphene is converted from an ideal two-dimensional semimetallic state to a quantum spin Hall insulator and the spin and charge conductances in these edge states are calculated and the effects of temperature, chemical potential, Rashba coupling, disorder, and symmetry breaking fields are discussed.
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Quantum Spin Hall Effect and Topological Phase Transition in HgTe Quantum Wells

TL;DR: In this article, the quantum spin Hall (QSH) effect can be realized in mercury-cadmium telluride semiconductor quantum wells, a state of matter with topological properties distinct from those of conventional insulators.
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Topological insulators in Bi2Se3, Bi2Te3 and Sb2Te3 with a single Dirac cone on the surface

TL;DR: In this article, first-principles electronic structure calculations of the layered, stoichiometric crystals Sb2Te3, Bi2Se3, SbSe3 and BiSe3 were performed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Z-2 Topological Order and the Quantum Spin Hall Effect

TL;DR: The Z2 order of the QSH phase is established in the two band model of graphene and a generalization of the formalism applicable to multiband and interacting systems is proposed.
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