Superdielectrics: Disorder-induced perfect screening in insulators
Ilia Komissarov, Tobias Holder, Raquel Queiroz

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of superdielectric materials, which are insulators with perfect screening due to divergence in electric susceptibility caused by disorder, despite finite localization length and quantum metric.
Contribution
It reveals a new insulating regime called superdielectric, characterized by divergent susceptibility and perfect screening, emerging from disorder in various materials.
Findings
Proportionality between quantum metric and localization length near criticality.
Divergence of electric susceptibility in disordered SSH chain.
Superdielectric phase observed in higher-dimensional materials like graphene.
Abstract
We study the relationship between the quantities that encode the insulating properties of matter: the ground-state quantum metric, the average localization length, and the electric susceptibility. By examining the one-dimensional Anderson insulator model and the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger chain with chiral disorder, we demonstrate that the former two measures are proportional in one-dimensional systems near criticality, and both are determined by the properties of the hybridized localized states around the Fermi energy. We employ these insights to demonstrate that the behavior of the electric susceptibility is drastically different in the bond-disordered SSH chain, with the possibility that it may diverge even when the localization length and the quantum metric remain finite. This divergence, caused by the proliferation of impurity resonances at a particular energy, leads to a novel regime…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena
