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113 - S. Thomas , D.J. Kim , S. B. Chung 2013
Strongly correlated Kondo insulator SmB6 is known for its peculiar low temperature residual conduction, which has recently been demonstrated to arise from a robust metallic surface state, as predicted by the theory of topological Kondo insulator (TKI). Photoemission, quantum oscillation and magnetic doping experiments have provided evidence for the Dirac-like dispersion and topological protection. Questions arise as whether signatures of spin-momentum locking and electron interaction could be resolved in transport measurements. Here we report metallic conduction of surface state down to mK temperatures with saturation behaviors suggestive of Kondo effect. We observe in the surface state the weak-antilocalization (WAL) effect that is in agreement with a spin-momentum locked metallic surface. At larger perpendicular magnetic fields, the surface state exhibits an unusual linear magnetoresistance similar to those found in Bi-based topological insulators and in graphene. (Correspondence to: [email protected])
85 - D.J. Kim , S. Thomas , T. Grant 2012
A topological insulator (TI) is an unusual quantum state in which the insulating bulk is topologically distinct from vacuum, resulting in a unique metallic surface that is robust against time-reversal invariant perturbations. These surface transport properties, however, remains difficult to be isolated from the bulk in existing TI crystals (Bi2Se3, Bi2Te3 and Sb2Te3) due to impurity caused bulk conduction. We report in large crystals of topological Kondo insulator (TKI) candidate material SmB6 the thickness-independent surface Hall effects and non- local transport, which are robust against perturbations including mechanical abrasion. These results serve as proof that at low temperatures SmB6 has a robust metallic surface that surrounds a truly insulating bulk, paving the way for transport studies of the surface state in this proposed TKI material. ([email protected]).
At high magnetic fields, where the Fermi level lies in the N=0 lowest Landau level (LL), a clean two-dimensional electron system (2DES) exhibits numerous incompressible liquid phases which display the fractional quantized Hall effect (FQHE) (Das Sarma and Pinczuk, 1997). These liquid phases do not break rotational symmetry, exhibiting resistivities which are isotropic in the plane. In contrast, at lower fields, when the Fermi level lies in the $Nge2$ third and several higher LLs, the 2DES displays a distinctly different class of collective states. In particular, near half filling of these high LLs the 2DES exhibits a strongly anisotropic longitudinal resistance at low temperatures (Lilly et al., 1999; Du et al., 1999). These stripe phases, which do not exhibit the quantized Hall effect, resemble nematic liquid crystals, possessing broken rotational symmetry and orientational order (Koulakov et al., 1996; Fogler et al., 1996; Moessner and Chalker, 1996; Fradkin and Kivelson, 1999; Fradkin et al, 2010). Here we report a surprising new observation: An electronic configuration in the N=1 second LL whose resistivity tensor simultaneously displays a robust fractionally quantized Hall plateau and a strongly anisotropic longitudinal resistance resembling that of the stripe phases.
A modest in-plane magnetic field Bpar is sufficient to destroy the fractional quantized Hall states at $ u = 5/2$ and 7/2 and replace them with anisotropic compressible phases. Remarkably, we find that at larger Bpar these anisotropic phases can themselves be replaced by isotropic compressible phases reminiscent of the composite fermion fluid at $ u = 1/2$. We present strong evidence that this transition is a consequence of the mixing of Landau levels from different electric subbands. We also report surprising dependences of the energy gaps at $ u = 5/2$ and 7/3 on the width of the confinement potential.
Polar Kerr effect in the high-Tc superconductor YBCO was measured at zero magnetic field with high precision using a cyogenic Sagnac fiber interferometer. We observed non-zero Kerr rotations of order $sim 1 mu$rad appearing near the pseudogap temperature $T^*$, and marking what appears to be a true phase transition. Anomalous magnetic behavior in magnetic-field training of the effect suggests that time reversal symmetry is already broken above room temperature.
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