\textit{Ab initio} calculations have been performed on hexagonal layers of
M2O3 (M being several transition metals of the 5d series) sandwiched by
a band insulator such as Al2O3 that provides the honeycomb lattice where
the 5d electrons reside. This corundum-structure-based superlattice is the
most obvious way to design a honeycomb lattice with transition metal cations
avoiding the use of largely polar surfaces. We obtain that this system supports
the presence of Dirac cones at the Fermi level that open up with the
introduction of spin-orbit coupling at various fillings of the 5d band. The
DFT calculations performed in this work show that the 5d5 situation is
always a trivial insulator, whereas the 5d8 filling presents topological
insulating configurations which evolve into a trivial state with increasing
tensile strain or on-site Coulomb potential U. However, LDA+U calculations show
a stable antiferromagnetic solution for the 5d8 case at every U value, which
would break time reversal symmetry and could affect the topological properties
of the system. We also discuss the similarities with the buckled honeycomb
lattice obtained using perovskite (111) bilayers previously studied in
literature, in particular for the 5d5 and 5d8 configurations. This work
provides some clues on the stability of topological phases using metal oxides
in general.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure