Abstract

An introductory overview of current research developments regarding solitons and fractional boundary charges in graphene nanoribbons is presented. Graphene nanoribbons and polyacetylene have chiral symmetry and share numerous similar properties, e.g., the bulk-edge correspondence between the Zak phase and the existence of edge states, along with the presence of chiral boundary states, which are important for charge fractionalization. In polyacetylene, a fermion mass potential in the Dirac equation produces an excitation gap, and a twist in this scalar potential produces a zero-energy chiral soliton. Similarly, in a gapful armchair graphene nanoribbon, a distortion in the chiral gauge field can produce soliton states. In polyacetylene, a soliton is bound to a domain wall connecting two different dimerized phases. In graphene nanoribbons, a domain-wall soliton connects two topological zigzag edges with different chiralities. However, such a soliton does not display spin-charge separation. The existence of a soliton in finite-length polyacetylene can induce formation of fractional charges on the opposite ends. In contrast, for gapful graphene nanoribbons, the antiferromagnetic coupling between the opposite zigzag edges induces integer boundary charges. The presence of disorder in graphene nanoribbons partly mitigates antiferromagnetic coupling effect. Hence, the average edge charge of gap states with energies within a small interval is , with significant charge fluctuations. However, midgap states exhibit a well-defined charge fractionalization between the opposite zigzag edges in the weak-disorder regime. Numerous occupied soliton states in a disorder-free and doped zigzag graphene nanoribbon form a solitonic phase.

Highlights

  • Graphene has considerable potential, for spintronic applications, and for fundamental physics [1,2]

  • It should be noted that a soliton mode of a graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) that we describe below connects sites with different chiralities

  • We describe below a domain-wall soliton of a semiconducting armchair GNR (AGNR) under a local tensile strain [13]

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Summary

Introduction

For spintronic applications, and for fundamental physics [1,2]. No fractional boundary charges are found in a GNR This is due to antiferromagnetic coupling between the zigzag edges [3]. The formation of fractional boundary charges in ZGNRs is more complex than that in polyacetylene, because of the antiferromagnetic coupling between the well-separated zigzag edges. The presence of topological boundary states in GNRs and polyacetylene is intimately related to the presence of chiral symmetry (sublattice symmetry) [4]. This behavior yields bulk edge correspondence, for which an edge mode must exist when the bulk topological Zak phase is π

Chiral Symmetry
Zak Phase and Edge Charge
Zak Phase of Polyacetylene
Edge Modes of Graphene Sheet and Zak Phase
Solitons in Polyacetylene
Domain-Wall Soliton in Polyacetylene
End Solitons of Polyacetylene
Solitons in Insulating GNR
Domain-Wall Soliton
Solitons of Interacting ZGNR
Soliton Fractional Charge of Interacting Disordered ZGNR
Summary and Conclusions
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