Using the Green functions method we study transport properties of surface electrons in topological insulators in the presence of a correlated random exchange field. Such an exchange field may be due to random magnetization with correlated fluctuations. We determine the relaxation time due to scattering from the magnetization fluctuations and from other structural defects. Then we calculate the longitudinal charge conductivity taking into account the contribution due to vertex correction.
We report a continuous phase transition between quantum-anomalous-Hall and trivial-insulator phases in a magnetic topological insulator upon magnetization rotation. The Hall conductivity transits from one plateau of quantized Hall conductivity $e^2/h
$ to the other plateau of zero Hall conductivity. The transition curves taken at various temperatures cross almost at a single point, exemplifying the critical behavior of the transition. The slope of the transition curves follows a power-law temperature dependence with a critical exponent of $-0.61$. This suggests a common underlying origin in the plateau transitions between the QAH and quantum Hall systems, which is a percolation of one-dimensional chiral edge channels.
The protected surface conductivity of topological insulators, carried by ultra-relativistic Dirac fermions, is in high demand for the next generation of electronic devices. Progress in the unambiguous identification of this surface contribution and,
in a second step, its control are needed to move forward. Here we demonstrate both, with a combined transport and spectroscopy study of high-quality single crystals and mesoscopic devices of the topological insulator TlBiSe2. We show how various external stimuli-from thermal radiation, via low-intensity light, to high-intensity laser pumping and current driving-can boost the surface contribution, thereby making it both unambiguously detectable and potentially exploitable for applications. Once switched on, the extra surface contribution is persistent, with lifetimes of hundreds of years at low temperatures. We understand this effect in terms of the well-known concept of surface charge accumulation via a Schottky barrier formation, and propose that the same mechanism underlies also the slow relaxations seen with spectroscopic probes in our and other materials, which might thus also be persistent. We expect our technique to be readily transferable to other materials and probes, thereby shedding light on unexplained slow relaxations in transport and beyond.
We show that skyrmions on the surface of a magnetic topological insulator may experience an attractive interaction that leads to the formation of a skyrmion-skyrmion bound state. This is in contrast to the case of skyrmions in a conventional chiral f
erromagnet, for which the intrinsic interaction is repulsive. The origin of skyrmion binding in our model is the molecular hybridization of topologically protected electronic orbitals associated with each skyrmion. Attraction between the skyrmions can therefore be controlled by tuning a chemical potential that populates/depopulates the lowest-energy molecular orbital. We find that the skyrmion-skyrmion bound state can be made stable, unstable, or metastable depending on the chemical potential, magnetic field, and easy-axis anisotropy of the underlying ferromagnet, resulting in a rich phase diagram. Finally, we discuss the possibility to realize this effect in a recently synthesized Cr doped ${left(mathrm{Bi}_{2-y}mathrm{Sb}_{y}right)}_{2}mathrm{Te}_3$ heterostructure.
The concept of topological insulator (TI) has introduced a new point of view to condensed-matter physics, relating a priori unrelated subfields such as quantum (spin, anomalous) Hall effects, spin-orbit coupled materials, some classes of nodal superc
onductors and superfluid $^3$He, etc. From a technological point of view, topological insulator is expected to serve as a platform for realizing dissipationless transport in a non-superconducting context. The topological insulator exhibits a gapless surface state with a characteristic conic dispersion (a surface Dirac cone). Here, we review peculiar finite-size effects applicable to such surface states in TI nanostructures. We highlight the specific electronic properties of TI nanowires and nanoparticles, and in this context contrast the cases of weak and strong TIs. We study robustness of the surface and the bulk of TIs against disorder, addressing the physics of Dirac and Weyl semimetals as a new perspective of research in the field.
The protected electron states at the boundaries or on the surfaces of topological insulators (TIs) have been the subject of intense theoretical and experimental investigations. Such states are enforced by very strong spin-orbit interaction in solids
composed of heavy elements. Here, we study the composite particles -- chiral excitons -- formed by the Coulomb attraction between electrons and holes residing on the surface of an archetypical three-dimensional topological insulator (TI), Bi$_2$Se$_3$. Photoluminescence (PL) emission arising due to recombination of excitons in conventional semiconductors is usually unpolarized because of scattering by phonons and other degrees of freedom during exciton thermalization. On the contrary, we observe almost perfectly polarization-preserving PL emission from chiral excitons. We demonstrate that the chiral excitons can be optically oriented with circularly polarized light in a broad range of excitation energies, even when the latter deviate from the (apparent) optical band gap by hundreds of meVs, and that the orientation remains preserved even at room temperature. Based on the dependences of the PL spectra on the energy and polarization of incident photons, we propose that chiral excitons are made from massive holes and massless (Dirac) electrons, both with chiral spin textures enforced by strong spin-orbit coupling. A theoretical model based on such proposal describes quantitatively the experimental observations. The optical orientation of composite particles, the chiral excitons, emerges as a general result of strong spin-orbit coupling in a 2D electron system. Our findings can potentially expand applications of TIs in photonics and optoelectronics.
S. Kud{l}a
,A. Dyrdal
,V. K. Dugaev
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(2019)
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"Conduction of surface electrons in a topological insulator with spatially random magnetization"
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Anna Dyrdal
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