Critical Behavior of a Point Contact in a Quantum Spin Hall Insulator
Jeffrey C.Y. Teo, C.L. Kane

TL;DR
This paper investigates the critical behavior of a quantum point contact in a quantum spin Hall insulator, revealing a novel quantum critical point, universal conductance scaling, and new phases influenced by spin interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the quantum critical point and conductance scaling in a quantum spin Hall insulator point contact, including solvable limits and the impact of spin orbit interactions.
Findings
Identification of a quantum critical point controlling pinch-off behavior.
Universal scaling functions for conductance near the transition.
Discovery of a spin non-conserving phase with unique transport properties.
Abstract
We study a quantum point contact in a quantum spin Hall insulator. It has recently been shown that the Luttinger liquid theory of such a structure maps to the theory of a weak link in a Luttinger liquid with spin with Luttinger liquid parameters g_\rho = 1/g_\sigma = g < 1. We show that for 1/2<g<1, the pinch-off of the point contact as a function of gate voltage is controlled by a novel quantum critical point, related to a nontrivial intermediate fixed point found previously in the Luttinger liquid model. We predict that the dependence of the conductance on gate voltage and temperature near the pinch-off transition collapses onto a universal curve described by a crossover scaling function. We compute the conductance, the critical exponents and the scaling function in solvable limits, which include g=1-\epsilon, g=1/2+\epsilon and g=1/\sqrt{3}. These results, along with a general…
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