Emergent SU(8) Dirac semimetal and novel proximate phases of spin-orbit coupled fermions on a honeycomb lattice

Abstract

Emergent Dirac fermions provide the starting point to understanding the plethora of novel condensed matter phases. The nature of the associated phases and phase transitions crucially depends on both the emergent symmetries as well as the implementation of the microscopic ones on the low-energy Dirac fermions. Here, we show that j=3/2 electrons in spin-orbit coupled materials on honeycomb lattice can give rise to SU(8) symmetric Dirac semimetals with symmetry implementation very different from that of graphene. This non-trivial embedding of the microscopic symmetries in the low energy is reflected in the nature of phases proximate to the Dirac semimetal. Such phases can arise from finite short-range electron-electron interactions. In particular, we identify 24 such phases - divided into three classes - and their low energy properties obtained by condensing particle-number conserving fermion bilinears that break very different microscopic symmetries and/or are topologically protected by symmetries. The latter includes interesting generalisations of quantum spin-Hall phases. Remarkably some of the resultant phases still support a sub-set of gapless fermions - protected by a sub-group of SU(8) - resulting in interesting density wave semimetals. Near the phase transitions to such density wave semimetals, the surviving gapless fermions strongly interact with the bosonic order parameter field and give rise to novel quantum critical points. Our study is applicable to a wide class of d1 and d3 transition metals with strong spin-orbit coupling and predicts that such materials can harbour a very rich interplay of symmetries and competing interactions in the intermediate correlation regime.

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