How spectrum-wide quantum criticality protects surface states of topological superconductors from Anderson localization: Quantum Hall plateau transitions (almost) all the way down
Jonas F. Karcher, Matthew S. Foster

TL;DR
This paper reviews numerical studies showing that surface states of 3D topological superconductors exhibit spectrum-wide quantum criticality, protected against Anderson localization by spectrum-wide topological effects, with implications for high-temperature superconductors.
Contribution
It demonstrates that surface states of certain topological superconductors maintain quantum criticality across the entire spectrum, challenging conventional localization expectations.
Findings
Surface states exhibit spectrum-wide multifractal eigenstates.
Identifies a connection between TSC surface states and quantum Hall plateau transitions.
Reveals topological protection prevents Anderson localization across the spectrum.
Abstract
We review recent numerical studies of two-dimensional (2D) Dirac fermion theories that exhibit an unusual mechanism of topological protection against Anderson localization. These describe surface-state quasiparticles of time-reversal invariant, three-dimensional (3D) topological superconductors (TSCs), subject to the effects of quenched disorder. Numerics reveal a surprising connection between 3D TSCs in classes AIII, CI, and DIII, and 2D quantum Hall effects in classes A, C, and D. Conventional arguments derived from the non-linear -model picture imply that most TSC surface states should Anderson localize for arbitrarily weak disorder (CI, AIII), or exhibit weak antilocalizing behavior (DIII). The numerical studies reviewed here instead indicate spectrum-wide surface quantum criticality, characterized by robust eigenstate multifractality throughout the surface-state energy…
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