Electron transport properties of a topological insulator Bi2Se3 thin
film are studied in Hall-bar geometry. The film with a thickness of 10 nm is
grown by van der Waals epitaxy on fluorophlogopite mica and Hall-bar devices
are fabricated from the as-grown film directly on the mica substrate. Weak
antilocalization and electron-electron interaction effects are observed and
analyzed at low temperatures. The phase-coherence length extracted from the
measured weak antilocalization characteristics shows a strong power-law
increase with decreasing temperature and the transport in the film is shown to
occur via coupled multiple (topological surface and bulk states) channels. The
conductivity of the film shows a logarithmically decrease with decreasing
temperature and thus the electron-electron interaction plays a dominant role in
quantum corrections to the conductivity of the film at low temperatures.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure