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Evidence for the quantum spin Hall (QSH) effect has been reported in several experimental systems in the form of approximately quantized edge conductance. However, the most fundamental feature of the QSH effect, spin-momentum locking in the edge channels, has never been demonstrated experimentally. Here, we report clear evidence for spin-momentum locking in the edge channels of monolayer WTe2, thought to be a two-dimensional topological insulator (2D TI). We observe that the edge conductance is controlled by the component of an applied magnetic field perpendicular to a particular axis, which we identify as the spin axis. The axis is the same for all edges, situated in the mirror plane perpendicular to the tungsten chains at 40$pm$2{deg} to the layer normal, implying that the spin-orbit coupling is inherited from the bulk band structure. We show that this finding is consistent with theory if the band-edge orbitals are taken to have like parity. We conclude that this parity assignment is correct and that both edge states and bulk bands in monolayer WTe2 share the same simple spin structure. Combined with other known features of the edge states this establishes spin-momentum locking, and therefore that monolayer WTe2 is truly a natural 2D TI.
A two-dimensional (2D) topological insulator (TI) exhibits the quantum spin Hall (QSH) effect, in which topologically protected spin-polarized conducting channels exist at the sample edges. Experimental signatures of the QSH effect have recently been
Monolayer WTe2 is predicted to be a quantum spin Hall insulator (QSHI) and electron transport along its edges has been experimentally observed. However, the smoking gun of QSHI, spin momentum locking of the edge electrons, has not been experimentally
We report an unconventional quantum spin Hall phase in the monolayer T$_text{d}$-WTe$_2$, which exhibits hitherto unknown features in other topological materials. The low-symmetry of the structure induces a canted spin texture in the $yz$ plane, whic
Quantum spin Hall (QSH) materials are two-dimensional systems exhibiting insulating bulk and helical edge states simultaneously. A QSH insulator processes topologically non-trivial edge states protected by time-reversal symmetry, so that electrons ca
The quantum spin Hall (QSH) state was recently demonstrated in monolayers of the transition metal dichalcogenide 1T-WTe$_2$ and is characterized by a band gap in the two-dimensional (2D) interior and helical one-dimensional (1D) edge states. Inducing