Candidates for correlated topological insulators, originated from the
spin-orbit coupling as well as Hubbard type correlation, are expected in the
(111) bilayer of perovskite-structural transition-metal oxides. Based on the
first-principles calculation and tight-binding model, the electronic structure
of a LaMnO3 (111) bilayer sandwiched in LaScO3 barriers has been
investigated. For the ideal undistorted perovskite structure, the Fermi energy
of LaMnO3 (111) bilayer just stays at the Dirac point, rendering a
semi-metal (graphene-like) which is also a half-metal (different from graphene
nor previous studied LaNiO3 (111) bilayer). The Dirac cone can be opened
by the spin-orbit coupling, giving rise to nontrivial topological bands
corresponding to the (quantized) anomalous Hall effect. For the realistic
orthorhombic distorted lattice, the Dirac point moves with increasing Hubbard
repulsion (or equivalent Jahn-Teller distortion). Finally, a Mott gap opens,
establishing a phase boundary between the Mott insulator and topological
magnetic insulator. Our calculation finds that the gap opened by spin-orbit
coupling is much smaller in the orthorhombic distorted lattice (∼1.7
meV) than the undistorted one (∼11 meV). Therefore, to suppress the
lattice distortion can be helpful to enhance the robustness of topological
phase in perovskite (111) bilayers.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure