203 research outputs found
First observation of spin-helical Dirac fermions and topological phases in undoped and doped Bi2Te3 demonstrated by spin-ARPES spectroscopy
Electron systems that possess light-like dispersion relations or the conical
Dirac spectrum, such as graphene and bismuth, have recently been shown to
harbor unusual collective states in high magnetic fields. Such states are
possible because their light-like electrons come in spin pairs that are
chiral,which means that their direction of propagation is tied to a quantity
called pseudospin that describes their location in the crystal lattice. An
emerging direction in quantum materials research is the manipulation of atomic
spin-orbit coupling to simulate the effect of a spin dependent magnetic
field,in attempt to realize novel spin phases of matter. This effect has been
proposed to realize systems consisting of unpaired Dirac cones that are
helical, meaning their direction of propagation is tied to the electron spin
itself, which are forbidden to exist in graphene or bismuth. The experimental
existence of topological order can not be determined without spin-resolved
measurements. Here we report a spin-and angle-resolved photoemission study of
the hexagonal surface of the Bi2Te3 and Bi{2-x}MnxTe3 series, which is found to
exhibit a single helical Dirac cone that is fully spin-polarized. Our
observations of a gap in the bulk spin-degenerate band and a spin-resolved
surface Dirac node close to the chemical potential show that the low energy
dynamics of Bi2Te3 is dominated by the unpaired spin-helical Dirac modes. Our
spin-texture measurements prove the existence of a rare topological phase in
this materials class for the first time, and suggest its suitability for novel
2D Dirac spin device applications beyond the chiral variety or traditional
graphene.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Topological Phase Transition and Texture Inversion in a Tunable Topological Insulator
The recently discovered three dimensional or bulk topological insulators are
expected to exhibit exotic quantum phenomena. It is believed that a trivial
insulator can be twisted into a topological state by modulating the spin-orbit
interaction or the crystal lattice via odd number of band inversions, driving
the system through a topological quantum phase transition. By directly
measuring the topological invariants (for the method to directly measure
Fu-Kane {}, see Hsieh \textit{et.al.,} Science 323, 919 (2009) at
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/323/5916/919.abstract) we report the
observation of a phase transition in a tunable spin-orbit system
BiTl(S{1-d}Se{d})2 (which is an analog of the most studied topological
insulator Bi2Se3, see Xia \textit{et.al.,} Nature Phys. 5, 398 (2009) at
http://www.nature.com/nphys/journal/v5/n6/full/nphys1294.html and Spin-Momentum
locking at
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v460/n7259/full/nature08234.html) where
the topological insulator state formation is visualized for the first time. In
the topological state, vortex-like polarization states are observed to exhibit
3D vectorial textures, which collectively feature a chirality transition of its
topological spin-textures as the spin-momentum locked (Z2 topologically
ordered) electrons on the surface go through the zero carrier density point.
Such phase transition and texture chirality inversion can be the physical basis
for observing \textit{fractional charge} (e/2) and other related fractional
topological phenomena.Comment: 13 pages, 4 Figures, Accepted for publication in Science (published
at ScienceExpress on 31 March, 2011
Is graphene on Ru(0001) a nanomesh?
The electronic structure of a single layer graphene on Ru(0001) is compared
with that of a single layer hexagonal boron nitride nanomesh on Ru(0001). Both
are corrugated sp2 networks and display a pi-band gap at the K point of their 1
x 1 Brillouin zone. Graphene has a distinct Fermi surface which indicates that
0.1 electrons are transferred per 1 x 1 unit cell. Photoemission from adsorbed
xenon identifies two distinct Xe 5p1/2 lines, separated by 240 meV, which
reveals a corrugated electrostatic potential energy surface. These two Xe
species are related to the topography of the system and have different
desorption energies.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
First direct observation of Spin-textures in Topological Insulators : Spin-resolved ARPES as a probe of topological quantum spin Hall effect and Berry's phase
A topologically ordered material is characterized by a rare quantum
organization of electrons that evades the conventional spontaneously broken
symmetry based classification of condensed matter. Exotic spin transport
phenomena such as the dissipationless quantum spin Hall effect have been
speculated to originate from a novel topological order whose identification
requires a spin sensitive measurement, which does not exist to this date in any
system (neither in Hg(Cd)Te quantum wells nor in the topological insulator
BiSb). Using Mott polarimetry, we probe the spin degrees of freedom of these
quantum spin Hall states and demonstrate that topological quantum numbers are
uniquely determined from spin texture imaging measurements. Applying this
method to the Bi{1-x}Sb{x} series, we identify the origin of its novel order
and unusual chiral properties. These results taken together constitute the
first observation of surface electrons collectively carrying a geometrical
quantum (Berry's) phase and definite chirality (mirror Chern number, n_M =-1),
which are the key electronic properties for realizing topological computing
bits with intrinsic spin Hall-like topological phenomena. Our spin-resolved
results not only provides the first clear proof of a topological insulating
state in nature but also demonstrate the utility of spin-resolved ARPES
technique in measuring the quantum spin Hall phases of matter.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, first Submitted to SCIENCE on July-22, 200
Observation of Time-Reversal-Protected Single-Dirac-Cone Topological-Insulator States in Bi_2Te_3 and Sb_2Te_3
We show that the strongly spin-orbit coupled materials Bi_2Te_3 and Sb_2Te_3 and their derivatives belong to the Z_2 topological-insulator class. Using a combination of first-principles theoretical calculations and photoemission spectroscopy, we directly show that Bi_2Te_3 is a large spin-orbit-induced indirect bulk band gap (δ∼150  meV) semiconductor whose surface is characterized by a single topological spin-Dirac cone. The electronic structure of self-doped Sb_2Te_3 exhibits similar Z_2 topological properties. We demonstrate that the dynamics of spin-Dirac fermions can be controlled through systematic Mn doping, making these materials classes potentially suitable for topological device applications
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