422 research outputs found
Transport Signatures of Fermi Surface Topology Change in BiTeI
We report a quantum magnetotransport signature of a change in Fermi surface
topology in the Rashba semiconductor BiTeI with systematic tuning of the Fermi
level . Beyond the quantum limit, we observe a marked increase/decrease in
electrical resistivity when is above/below the Dirac node that we show
originates from the Fermi surface topology. This effect represents a
measurement of the electron distribution on the low-index () Landau
levels and is uniquely enabled by the finite bulk dispersion along the
-axis and strong Rashba spin-orbit coupling strength of the system. The
Dirac node is independently identified by Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations as a
vanishing Fermi surface cross section at . Additionally we find that the
violation of Kohler's rule allows a distinct insight into the temperature
evolution of the observed quantum magnetoresistance effects.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Electronic Transport on the Shastry-Sutherland Lattice in Ising-type Rare Earth Tetraborides
In the presence of a magnetic field frustrated spin systems may exhibit
plateaus at fractional values of saturation magnetization. Such plateau states
are stabilized by classical and quantum mechanisms including order-by-disorder,
triplon crystallization, and various competing order effects. In the case of
electrically conducting systems, free electrons represent an incisive probe for
the plateau states. Here we study the electrical transport of Ising-type rare
earth tetraborides B (Er, Tm), a metallic Shastry-Sutherland lattice
showing magnetization plateaus. We find that the longitudinal and transverse
resistivities reflect scattering with both the static and dynamic plateau
structure. We model these results consistently with the expected strong
uniaxial anisotropy in a quantitative level, providing a framework for the
study of plateau states in metallic frustrated systems.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
The zero-energy state in graphene in a high magnetic field
The fate of the charge-neutral Dirac point in graphene in a high magnetic
field has been investigated at low temperatures ( 0.3 K). In samples
with small (the gate voltage needed to access the Dirac point), the
resistance at the Dirac point diverges steeply with , signalling a
crossover to an insulating state in intense field. The approach to the
insulating state is highly unusual. Despite the steep divergence in , the
profile of vs. in fixed saturates to a -independent value
below 2 K, consistent with charge carrying gapless excitations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Four new sub-figures have been added. Text
expanded to discuss data from more sample
Bulk Band Gap and Surface State Conduction Observed in Voltage-Tuned Crystals of the Topological Insulator BiSe
We report a transport study of exfoliated few monolayer crystals of
topological insulator BiSe in an electric field effect (EFE) geometry.
By doping the bulk crystals with Ca, we are able to fabricate devices with
sufficiently low bulk carrier density to change the sign of the Hall density
with the gate voltage . We find that the temperature and magnetic
field dependent transport properties in the vicinity of this can be
explained by a bulk channel with activation gap of approximately 50 meV and a
relatively high mobility metallic channel that dominates at low . The
conductance (approximately 2 7), weak anti-localization, and
metallic resistance-temperature profile of the latter lead us to identify it
with the protected surface state. The relative smallness of the observed gap
implies limitations for EFE topological insulator devices at room temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. In new version, panels have been removed from
Figures 1, 2, and 4 to improve clarity. Additional data included in Figure 4.
Introduction and discussion revised and expande
Extreme Magnetoresistance in Magnetic Rare Earth Monopnictides
The acute sensitivity of the electrical resistance of certain systems to
magnetic fields known as extreme magnetoresistance (XMR) has recently been
explored in a new materials context with topological semimetals. Exemplified by
WTe and rare earth monopnictide La(Sb,Bi), these systems tend to be
non-magnetic, nearly compensated semimetals and represent a platform for large
magnetoresistance driven by intrinsic electronic structure. Here we explore
electronic transport in magnetic members of the latter family of semimetals and
find that XMR is strongly modulated by magnetic order. In particular, CeSb
exhibits XMR in excess of % at fields of 9 T while the
magnetoresistance itself is non-monotonic across the various magnetic phases
and shows a transition from negative magnetoresistance to XMR with field above
magnetic ordering temperature . The magnitude of the XMR is larger than
in other rare earth monopnictides including the non-magnetic members and
follows an non-saturating power law to fields above 30 T. We show that the
overall response can be understood as the modulation of conductivity by the Ce
orbital state and for intermediate temperatures can be characterized by an
effective medium model. Comparison to the orbitally quenched compound GdBi
supports the correlation of XMR with the onset of magnetic ordering and
compensation and highlights the unique combination of orbital inversion and
type-I magnetic ordering in CeSb in determining its large response. These
findings suggest a paradigm for magneto-orbital control of XMR and are relevant
to the understanding of rare earth-based correlated topological materials.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
Superconductivity and non-metallicity induced by doping the topological insulators Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3
We show that by Ca-doping the Bi2Se3 topological insulator, the Fermi level
can be fine tuned to fall inside the band gap and therefore suppress the bulk
conductivity. Non-metallic Bi2Se3 crystals are obtained. On the other hand, the
Bi2Se3 topological insulator can also be induced to become a bulk
superconductor, with Tc ~ 3.8 K, by copper intercalation in the van der Waals
gaps between the Bi2Se3 layers. Likewise, an as-grown crystal of metallic
Bi2Te3 can be turned into a non-metallic crystal by slight variation of the Te
content. The Bi2Te3 topological insulator shows small amounts of
superconductivity with Tc ~ 5.5 K when reacted with Pd to form materials of the
type PdxBi2Te3
Band engineering of a magnetic thin film rare earth monopnictide
Realizing quantum materials in few atomic layer morphologies is a key to both
observing and controlling a wide variety of exotic quantum phenomena. This
includes topological electronic materials, where the tunability and
dimensionality of few layer materials have enabled the detection of ,
Chern, and Majorana phases. Here, we report the development of a platform for
thin film correlated, topological states in the magnetic rare-earth
monopnictide () system GdBi synthesized by molecular beam epitaxy. This
material is known from bulk single crystal studies to be semimetallic
antiferromagnets with Neel temperature 28 K and is the magnetic analog
of the non--electron containing system LaBi proposed to have topological
surface states. Our transport and magnetization studies of thin films grown
epitaxially on BaF reveal that semimetallicity is lifted below
approximately 8 crystallographic unit cells while magnetic order is maintained
down to our minimum thickness of 5 crystallographic unit cells.
First-principles calculations show that the non-trivial topology is preserved
down to the monolayer limit, where quantum confinement and the lattice symmetry
give rise to a Chern insulator phase. We further demonstrate the
stabilization of these films against atmospheric degradation using a
combination of air-free buffer and capping procedures. These results together
identify thin film materials as potential platforms for engineering
topological electronic bands in correlated magnetic materials
Anderson Localization from Berry-Curvature Interchange in Quantum Anomalous Hall System
We theoretically investigate the localization mechanism of the quantum
anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) in the presence of spin-flip disorders. We show
that the QAHE keeps quantized at weak disorders, then enters a Berry-curvature
mediated metallic phase at moderate disorders, and finally goes into the
Anderson insulating phase at strong disorders. From the phase diagram, we find
that at the charge neutrality point although the QAHE is most robust against
disorders, the corresponding metallic phase is much easier to be localized into
the Anderson insulating phase due to the \textit{interchange} of Berry
curvatures carried respectively by the conduction and valence bands. At the
end, we provide a phenomenological picture related to the topological charges
to better understand the underlying physical origin of the QAHE Anderson
localization.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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