@phdthesis{Schnells2019, author = {Schnells, Vera}, title = {Fractional Insulators and their Parent Hamiltonians}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-18561}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-185616}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In the past few years, two-dimensional quantum liquids with fractional excitations have been a topic of high interest due to their possible application in the emerging field of quantum computation and cryptography. This thesis is devoted to a deeper understanding of known and new fractional quantum Hall states and their stabilization in local models. We pursue two different paths, namely chiral spin liquids and fractionally quantized, topological phases. The chiral spin liquid is one of the few examples of spin liquids with fractional statistics. Despite its numerous promising properties, the microscopic models for this state proposed so far are all based on non-local interactions, making the experimental realization challenging. In the first part of this thesis, we present the first local parent Hamiltonians, for which the Abelian and non-Abelian chiral spin liquids are the exact and, modulo a topological degeneracy, unique ground states. We have developed a systematic approach to find an annihilation operator of the chiral spin liquid and construct from it a many-body interaction which establishes locality. For various system sizes and lattice geometries, we numerically find largely gapped eigenspectra and confirm to an accuracy of machine precision the uniqueness of the chiral spin liquid as ground state of the respective system. Our results provide an exact spin model in which fractional quantization can be studied. Topological insulators are one of the most actively studied topics in current condensed matter physics research. With the discovery of the topological insulator, one question emerged: Is there an interaction-driven set of fractionalized phases with time reversal symmetry? One intuitive approach to the theoretical construction of such a fractional topological insulator is to take the direct product of a fractional quantum Hall state and its time reversal conjugate. However, such states are well studied conceptually and do not lead to new physics, as the idea of taking a state and its mirror image together without any entanglement between the states has been well understood in the context of topological insulators. Therefore, the community has been looking for ways to implement some topological interlocking between different spin species. Yet, for all practical purposes so far, time reversal symmetry has appeared to limit the set of possible fractional states to those with no interlocking between the two spin species. In the second part of this thesis, we propose a new universality class of fractionally quantized, topologically ordered insulators, which we name "fractional insulator". Inspired by the fractional quantum Hall effect, spin liquids, and fractional Chern insulators, we develop a wave function approach to a new class of topological order in a two-dimensional crystal of spin-orbit coupled electrons. The idea is simply to allow the topological order to violate time reversal symmetry, while all locally observable quantities remain time reversal invariant. We refer to this situation as "topological time reversal symmetry breaking". Our state is based on the Halperin double layer states and can be viewed as a two-layer system of an ↑-spin and a ↓-spin sphere. The construction starts off with Laughlin states for the ↑-spin and ↓-spin electrons and an interflavor term, which creates correlations between the two layers. With a careful parameter choice, we obtain a state preserving time reversal symmetry locally, and label it the "311-state". For systems of up to six ↑-spin and six ↓-spin electrons, we manage to construct an approximate parent Hamiltonian with a physically realistic, local interaction.}, subject = {Spinfl{\"u}ssigkeit}, language = {en} }