Statistical translation invariance protects a topological insulator from interactions

Abstract

We investigate the effect of interactions on the stability of a disordered, two-dimensional topological insulator realized as an array of nanowires or chains of magnetic atoms on a superconducting substrate. The Majorana zero-energy modes present at the ends of the wires overlap, forming a dispersive edge mode with thermal conductance determined by the central charge c of the low-energy effective field theory of the edge. We show numerically that, in the presence of disorder, the c=1/2 Majorana edge mode remains delocalized up to extremely strong attractive interactions, while repulsive interactions drive a transition to a c=3/2 edge phase localized by disorder. The absence of localization for strong attractive interactions is explained by a self-duality symmetry of the statistical ensemble of disorder configurations and of the edge interactions, originating from translation invariance on the length scale of the underlying mesoscopic array.

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