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Dulmage-Mendelsohn percolation: Geometry of maximally-packed dimer models and topologically-protected zero modes on diluted bipartite lattices

ORAL

Abstract

The classic combinatorial construct of {\em maximum matchings} probes the random geometry of regions with local sublattice imbalance in a site-diluted bipartite lattice. We demonstrate that these regions, which host the monomers of any maximum matching of the lattice, control the localization properties of a zero-energy quantum particle hopping on this lattice. The structure theory of Dulmage and Mendelsohn provides us with a way of identifying a complete and non-overlapping set of such regions. This motivates our large-scale computational study of the Dulmage-Mendelsohn decomposition of site-diluted bipartite lattices in two and three dimensions. Our computations uncover an interesting universality class of percolation associated with the end-to-end connectivity of such monomer-carrying regions with local sublattice imbalance, which we dub {\em Dulmage-Mendelsohn percolation}. Our results imply the existence of a monomer percolation transition in the classical statistical mechanics of the associated maximally-packed dimer model and the existence of a phase with area-law entanglement entropy of arbitrary many-body eigenstates of the corresponding quantum dimer model. They also have striking implications for the nature of collective zero-energy Majorana fermion excitations of bipartite networks of Majorana modes localized on sites of diluted lattices, for the character of topologically-protected zero-energy wavefunctions of the bipartite random hopping problem on such lattices, and thence for the corresponding quantum percolation problem, and for the nature of low-energy magnetic excitations in bipartite quantum antiferromagnets diluted by a small density of nonmagnetic impurities

Presenters

  • Ritesh K Bhola

    Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (

Authors

  • Ritesh K Bhola

    Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (

  • Md Mursalin Islam

    Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (

  • Sounak Biswas

    Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, Oxford University

  • Kedar Damle

    Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research