Abstract

Graphene nanoribbons are a promising candidate for fault-tolerant quantum electronics. In this scenario, qubits are realized by localized states that can emerge on junctions in hybrid ribbons formed by two armchair nanoribbons of different widths. We derive an effective theory based on a tight-binding ansatz for the description of hybrid nanoribbons and use it to make accurate predictions of the energy gap and nature of the localization in various hybrid nanoribbon geometries. We use quantum Monte Carlo simulations to demonstrate that the effective theory remains applicable in the presence of Hubbard interactions. We discover, in addition to the well-known localizations on junctions, which we call “Fuji”, a new type of “Kilimanjaro” localization smeared out over a segment of the hybrid ribbon. We show that Fuji localizations in hybrids of width N and N+2 armchair nanoribbons occur around symmetric junctions if and only if N(mod3)=1, while edge-aligned junctions never support strong localization. This behavior cannot be explained relying purely on the topological Z2 invariant, which has been believed to be the origin of the localizations to date. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

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