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arxiv: 2604.14665 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-16 · ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall

Effect of Rashba spin-orbit coupling on Faraday rotation in an extended Haldane model

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 10:28 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords Faraday rotationRashba spin-orbit couplingHaldane modelChern numbertopological phasesmagneto-optical responseKubo formalism
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The pith

Rashba spin-orbit coupling tunes Faraday rotation peaks above 4 degrees and creates flat profiles in an extended Haldane model.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper examines how Rashba spin-orbit coupling modifies Faraday rotation spectra inside an extended version of the Haldane model that also includes exchange splitting. In the Chern number C=2 topological phase without exchange splitting, the rotation angle exceeds 4 degrees and its frequency peak shifts when Rashba strength is changed. Adding exchange splitting produces a nearly frequency-independent rotation profile whose height grows steadily with Rashba coupling because new interband transitions contribute constructively. A low-energy effective Hamiltonian expanded to quadratic order reproduces the lattice results. The findings indicate that magneto-optical response can be engineered by adjusting Rashba parameters.

Core claim

In the C=2 region of the extended Haldane model, Rashba SOC opens additional transition channels whose net contribution raises the Faraday rotation peak above 4 degrees and makes its position tunable when exchange splitting is absent; with exchange splitting included, the rotation profile flattens over a broad frequency window and its peak values increase monotonically with Rashba SOC strength, as confirmed by Kubo calculations on the tight-binding model and by the matching low-energy effective theory.

What carries the argument

The Kubo linear-response formula applied to the tight-binding Hamiltonian of the extended Haldane model, where the Rashba SOC term and the exchange splitting term together determine the off-diagonal optical conductivity that produces Faraday rotation.

If this is right

  • Varying Rashba SOC strength shifts the frequency location of large Faraday rotation peaks in the C=2 phase.
  • Exchange splitting together with Rashba SOC produces a nearly flat Faraday rotation spectrum over a wide frequency range.
  • Faraday rotation peak heights increase monotonically with Rashba SOC because newly opened transition channels add constructively.
  • The quadratic low-energy effective Hamiltonian reproduces the Faraday rotation spectra of the full lattice model.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Gate-tuned Rashba coupling in a real sample could allow voltage control of both the size and the frequency of Faraday rotation.
  • The same channel-opening mechanism may enhance rotation in other Chern insulator models that include Rashba terms.
  • Low disorder will be required in experiment to preserve the predicted flat rotation profile against broadening.
  • Adding electron interactions to the model would test whether the monotonic growth of the peak survives many-body effects.

Load-bearing premise

The clean tight-binding model treated with the Kubo formalism accurately gives the magneto-optical response without needing corrections from disorder, finite-size effects, or electron interactions.

What would settle it

Measure the Faraday rotation spectrum in a two-dimensional material realizing the C=2 phase of this model and check whether the angle exceeds 4 degrees without exchange splitting and whether the profile becomes flat and larger with exchange splitting.

read the original abstract

Utilization of Faraday rotation (FR) properties of topological materials offers a promising route toward novel magneto-optical devices. We systematically investigated the effect of Rashba spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on FR spectra in an extended Haldane model, which incorporates Rashba SOC and exchange splitting into the original spinless Haldane framework. Using the Kubo formalism, we calculated the FR spectra across the model's rich topological phase diagram. We found that in the Chern number C=2 region, in the absence of exchange splitting, the FR angle can exceed 4$^\circ$ and its peak position is tunable by the Rashba SOC. In contrast, with the inclusion of exchange splitting, a nearly flat FR profile emerges over a broad frequency range, and the FR peak values increase monotonically with the Rashba SOC strength. The Rashba SOC opens additional transition channels, whose net contribution constructively enhances the FR peak. Furthermore, we derived a low-energy effective Hamiltonian expanded up to quadratic terms, the results of which are in good agreement with tight-binding model calculations, thereby validating our numerical results. Our findings suggest that magneto-optical device characteristics can be designed and optimized through Rashba SOC engineering.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper examines the impact of Rashba spin-orbit coupling on Faraday rotation spectra within an extended Haldane model that also includes exchange splitting. Employing the Kubo formalism, the authors calculate the FR angle across the topological phase diagram. Key findings include FR angles exceeding 4 degrees in the Chern number C=2 phase without exchange splitting, with tunability via Rashba SOC, and a nearly flat FR profile with monotonically increasing peaks when exchange splitting is present. A quadratic low-energy effective Hamiltonian is derived that agrees with the tight-binding results, attributing the enhancement to additional interband transitions from Rashba SOC.

Significance. Should the results be confirmed, this study highlights the potential for Rashba SOC engineering to optimize magneto-optical properties in topological insulators or similar 2D systems, offering pathways for device applications with large and controllable Faraday rotation. The internal consistency between the effective model and lattice calculations strengthens the findings, providing both numerical and analytical insights into the role of SOC in magneto-optics.

major comments (2)
  1. [Numerical Results section] The central quantitative claim of FR angles >4° in the C=2 region (as stated in the abstract and results) is presented without error bars, convergence tests for lattice size or k-grid, or sensitivity analysis to the imaginary broadening in the Kubo formula. This is load-bearing for the specific value and tunability claims, as finite-size effects or numerical artifacts could affect the peak heights.
  2. [Low-energy effective Hamiltonian derivation] While agreement with tight-binding is claimed for the low-energy quadratic Hamiltonian, the manuscript should specify the frequency range or parameter regime where the expansion holds for the FR calculation, and include a direct comparison figure for the FR spectra from both methods to substantiate the validation of the reported peak values.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract mentions 'extended Haldane model' but a brief definition or reference to the original Haldane model would help readers unfamiliar with it.
  2. [Figures] Ensure that all figures showing FR spectra have clear labels for the different Rashba strengths and exchange values used, and indicate the corresponding Chern number regions.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for the constructive comments. We address each major point below and will incorporate the suggested revisions.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Numerical Results section] The central quantitative claim of FR angles >4° in the C=2 region (as stated in the abstract and results) is presented without error bars, convergence tests for lattice size or k-grid, or sensitivity analysis to the imaginary broadening in the Kubo formula. This is load-bearing for the specific value and tunability claims, as finite-size effects or numerical artifacts could affect the peak heights.

    Authors: The calculations are deterministic, so conventional statistical error bars are not applicable. However, we agree that explicit convergence tests are needed to support the quantitative claims. In the revised manuscript we will add results demonstrating convergence with respect to lattice size and k-grid density, together with a sensitivity analysis to the imaginary broadening parameter used in the Kubo formula. These checks confirm that the reported FR angles exceeding 4° and their tunability with Rashba SOC remain stable. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Low-energy effective Hamiltonian derivation] While agreement with tight-binding is claimed for the low-energy quadratic Hamiltonian, the manuscript should specify the frequency range or parameter regime where the expansion holds for the FR calculation, and include a direct comparison figure for the FR spectra from both methods to substantiate the validation of the reported peak values.

    Authors: We will add an explicit statement that the quadratic low-energy Hamiltonian is valid in the low-frequency regime, well below the bandwidth of the model where higher-order terms remain negligible. We will also include a new figure that directly overlays the Faraday rotation spectra obtained from the tight-binding model and from the effective Hamiltonian, thereby substantiating the agreement and validating the reported peak values. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained

full rationale

The Faraday rotation is obtained by direct application of the Kubo formula to the conductivity tensor of the extended Haldane tight-binding model, with Rashba SOC strength and exchange splitting treated as independent input parameters. The low-energy quadratic effective Hamiltonian is derived from the lattice model and used only for cross-validation of the numerical spectra; agreement confirms consistency but does not substitute for or tautologically reproduce the primary results. No step equates a fitted quantity to a prediction, renames a known result, or relies on a load-bearing self-citation whose content reduces to the present work. The phase-diagram exploration and reported FR enhancements (>4° in C=2, monotonic increase with Rashba) therefore remain independent of the output quantities.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

2 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The model is defined by a tight-binding Hamiltonian on the honeycomb lattice whose parameters (nearest-neighbor hopping, next-nearest-neighbor complex hopping, Rashba strength, exchange splitting) are introduced as free inputs; no new particles or forces are postulated.

free parameters (2)
  • Rashba SOC strength
    Tunable parameter that controls additional spin-momentum mixing and opens extra optical transition channels.
  • Exchange splitting
    Phenomenological term that breaks time-reversal symmetry differently for spin species.
axioms (2)
  • standard math Kubo linear-response formula gives the optical conductivity from the current-current correlation function
    Invoked to compute Faraday rotation from the model's band structure.
  • domain assumption Low-energy expansion to quadratic order captures the essential optical response near the Dirac points
    Used to validate the tight-binding numerics.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5510 in / 1566 out tokens · 41128 ms · 2026-05-10T10:28:40.754129+00:00 · methodology

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Works this paper leans on

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