Dual gauge field theory of quantum liquid crystals in two dimensions
Aron J. Beekman, Jaakko Nissinen, Kai Wu, Ke Liu, Robert-Jan Slager,, Zohar Nussinov, Vladimir Cvetkovic, and Jan Zaanen

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theory of quantum liquid crystals in two dimensions, describing phases like nematics and smectics via a gauge duality approach, and explores their collective modes and electromagnetic responses.
Contribution
It introduces a dual gauge field framework for quantum liquid crystals, elucidates the nature of their collective excitations, and analyzes electromagnetic properties including superconductivity in nematics.
Findings
Quantum nematics exhibit a true rotational Goldstone mode.
Quantum nematics are superconductors with a Meissner effect.
Quantum smectics display highly anisotropic collective modes.
Abstract
We present a self-contained review of the theory of dislocation-mediated quantum melting at zero temperature in two spatial dimensions. The theory describes the liquid-crystalline phases with spatial symmetries in between a quantum crystalline solid and an isotropic superfluid: quantum nematics and smectics. It is based on an Abelian-Higgs-type duality mapping of phonons onto gauge bosons ("stress photons"), which encode for the capacity of the crystal to propagate stresses. Dislocations and disclinations, the topological defects of the crystal, are sources for the gauge fields and the melting of the crystal can be understood as the proliferation (condensation) of these defects, giving rise to the Anderson-Higgs mechanism on the dual side. For the liquid crystal phases, the shear sector of the gauge bosons becomes massive signaling that shear rigidity is lost. Resting on symmetry…
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