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Bismuthene on a SiC substrate: A candidate for a high-temperature quantum spin Hall material - MaRDI portal

Bismuthene on a SiC substrate: A candidate for a high-temperature quantum spin Hall material

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Publication:4646061

DOI10.1126/SCIENCE.AAI8142zbMATH Open1404.81335arXiv1608.00812OpenAlexW3098152251WikidataQ48058695 ScholiaQ48058695MaRDI QIDQ4646061

Author name not available (Why is that?)

Publication date: 11 January 2019

Published in: Science (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: Quantum spin Hall (QSH) materials promise revolutionary device applications based on dissipationless propagation of spin currents. They are two-dimensional (2D) representatives of the family of topological insulators, which exhibit conduction channels at their edges inherently protected against scattering. Initially predicted for graphene, and eventually realized in HgTe quantum wells, in the QSH systems realized so far, the decisive bottleneck preventing applications is the small bulk energy gap of less than 30 meV, requiring cryogenic operation temperatures in order to suppress detrimental bulk contributions to the edge conductance. Room-temperature functionalities, however, require much larger gaps. Here we show how this can be achieved by making use of a new QSH paradigm based on substrate-supported atomic monolayers of a high-Z element. Experimentally, the material is synthesized as honeycomb lattice of bismuth atoms, forming "bismuthene", on top of the wide-gap substrate SiC(0001). Consistent with the theoretical expectations, the spectroscopic signatures in experiment display a huge gap of ~0.8 eV in bismuthene, as well as conductive edge states. The analysis of the layer-substrate orbitals arrives at a QSH phase, whose topological gap - as a hallmark mechanism - is driven directly by the atomic spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Our results demonstrate how strained artificial lattices of heavy atoms, in contact with an insulating substrate, can be utilized to evoke a novel topological wide-gap scenario, where the chemical potential is located well within the global system gap, ensuring pure edge state conductance. We anticipate future experiments on topological signatures, such as transport measurements that probe the QSH effect via quantized universal conductance, notably at room temperature.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.00812











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