Features and Transport Properties of 2D Topological-Insulator Polygonal Flakes

Abstract

Conventional topological insulators in d-dimensions are characterised by gapless states localised at their boundaries with topologically trivial insulators, such as the vacuum. These gapless states exist in (d−1)-dimensions. Higher-order topological insulators host gapless boundary states in fewer dimensions, along hinges (d= 3) or at the corners (d= 3, 2) of a system. This thesis focuses on two-dimensional second- order topological insulators with localised states at their corners. Two models are considered, where the topological character is protected by i) a combined fourfold rotation and time-reversal symmetry or ii) inversion symmetry. In both cases a low-energy theory along an edge is used to derive conditions on the features, locations and total number of these states in polygonal flakes.Multi-terminal transport through a rectangular flake is studied, where the leads are first-order topological insulators supporting helical edge states. It is demonstrated that these setups function as topological switches, where the transmission between neighbouring contacts is controlled by an in-plane magnetic field. This functionality is shown to be remarkably robust to the presence of strong disorder due to the topological nature of the states contributing to transport. Introducing a proximity-induced s-wave pairing in the leads of a two-terminal setup provides a new perspective to Fu and Kane’s study of a superconductor/quantum-spin-Hall/superconductor junction: the edge states in the leads resemble Kitaev’s one-dimensional p-wave superconducting wire, in which Majorana zero-modes are predicted to localise at the ends (near the flake). The current phase relation has 4π rather than 2π periodicity due to the hybridisation of these modes. This is a well known Majorana signature, and many proposals have been made to realise it in other systems. The connection between the work in this thesis and the literature is discussed.</p

Similar works

Full text

thumbnail-image

Victoria University of Wellington

redirect
Last time updated on 10/05/2025

This paper was published in Victoria University of Wellington.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0