43 research outputs found
Weak Localization and Antilocalization in Topological Materials with Impurity Spin-Orbit Interactions
Topological materials have attracted considerable experimental and
theoretical attention. They exhibit strong spin-orbit coupling both in the band
structure (intrinsic) and in the impurity potentials (extrinsic), although the
latter is often neglected. Here we discuss weak localization and
antilocalization of massless Dirac fermions in topological insulators and
massive Dirac fermions in Weyl semimetal thin films taking into account both
intrinsic and extrinsic spin-orbit interactions. The physics is governed by the
complex interplay of the chiral spin texture, quasiparticle mass, and scalar
and spin-orbit scattering. We demonstrate that terms linear in the extrinsic
spin-orbit scattering are generally present in the Bloch and momentum
relaxation times in all topological materials, and the correction to the
diffusion constant is linear in the strength of the extrinsic spin-orbit. In
TIs, which have zero quasiparticle mass, the terms linear in the impurity
spin-orbit coupling lead to an observable density dependence in the weak
antilocalization correction. They produce substantial qualitative modifications
to the magnetoconductivity, differing greatly from the conventional HLN formula
traditionally used in experimental fits, which predicts a crossover from weak
localization to antilocalization as a function of the extrinsic spin-orbit
strength. In contrast, our analysis reveals that topological insulators always
exhibit weak antilocalization. In WSM thin films having intermediate to large
values of the quasiparticle mass extrinsic spin-orbit scattering strongly
affects the boundary of the weak localization to antilocalization transition.
We produce a complete phase diagram for this transition as a function of the
mass and spin-orbit scattering strength. We discuss implications for
experiments and provide a brief comparison with transition metal
dichalcogenides.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1705.0761
Accessing topological superconductivity via a combined STM and renormalization group analysis
The search for topological superconductors has recently become a key issue in
condensed matter physics, because of their possible relevance to provide a
platform for Majorana bound states, non-Abelian statistics, and fault-tolerant
quantum computing. We propose a new scheme which links as directly as possible
the experimental search to a material-based microscopic theory for topological
superconductivity. For this, the analysis of scanning tunneling microscopy,
which typically uses a phenomenological ansatz for the superconductor gap
functions, is elevated to a theory, where a multi-orbital functional
renormalization group analysis allows for an unbiased microscopic determination
of the material-dependent pairing potentials. The combined approach is
highlighted for paradigmatic hexagonal systems, such as doped graphene and
water-intercalated sodium cobaltates, where lattice symmetry and electronic
correlations yield a propensity for a chiral singlet topological superconductor
state. We demonstrate that our microscopic material-oriented procedure is
necessary to uniquely resolve a topological superconductor state.Comment: phenomenological STM predictions and temperature dependence of
conductance as well as references added (28 pages, 8 figures
Tuning Topological Superconductivity in Phase-Controlled Josephson Junctions with Rashba and Dresselhaus Spin-Orbit Coupling
Recently, topological superconductors based on Josephson junctions in
two-dimensional electron gases with strong Rashba spin-orbit coupling have been
proposed as attractive alternatives to wire-based setups. Here, we elucidate
how phase-controlled Josephson junctions based on quantum wells with [001]
growth direction and an arbitrary combination of Rashba and Dresselhaus
spin-orbit coupling can also host Majorana bound states for a wide range of
parameters as long as the magnetic field is oriented appropriately. Hence,
Majorana bound states based on Josephson junctions can appear in a wide class
of two-dimensional electron gases. We study the effect of spin-orbit coupling,
the Zeeman energies, and the superconducting phase difference to create a full
topological phase diagram and find the optimal stability region to observe
Majorana bound states in narrow junctions. Surprisingly, for equal Rashba and
Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling, well localized Majorana bound states can
appear only for phase differences as the topological gap
protecting the Majorana bound states vanishes at . Our results show
that the ratio between Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling or the choice
of the in-plane crystallographic axis along which the superconducting phase
bias is applied offer additional tunable knobs to test Majorana bound states in
these systems. Finally, we discuss signatures of Majorana bound states that
could be probed experimentally by tunneling conductance measurements at the
edge of the junction.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure