Universally optimizable strategy for magnetic gaps towards high-temperature quantum anomalous Hall states via magnetic-insulator/topological-insulator building-blocks
Optimizing the magnetic Zeeman-splitting term, specifically the magnetic gap of the topological surface states (TSSs), is a crucial issue and central challenge in advancing higher-temperature quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) states. In this work, we demonstrate a counterintuitive, nonmonotonic relations...
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Zusammenfassung: | Optimizing the magnetic Zeeman-splitting term, specifically the magnetic gap
of the topological surface states (TSSs), is a crucial issue and central
challenge in advancing higher-temperature quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) states.
In this work, we demonstrate a counterintuitive, nonmonotonic relationship
between the magnetic gap and the hybridization strength in
ferromagnetic-insulator (FMI)/topological-insulator (TI) sandwich structures.
Concretely, insufficient hybridization strength fails to induce a substantial
magnetic gap; while excessive hybridization incandesces the competition between
kinetic and Coulomb exchange interactions, thereby reducing the gap. Strong
hybridization strength also spatially delocalizes the TSSs, diminishing the
effective orbital coupling between TSS-based p and magnetic d orbitals, which
further weakens kinetic and Coulomb exchange interaction strength. Moreover,
modifying the stacking order offers an experimentally viable approach to
optimizing magnetic gaps, enabling the tunability of Chern numbers, chirality
and maximizing global gaps. These findings unveil a universal guiding principle
for optimizing magnetic gaps in FMI-TI proximity-based QAH systems, offering
valuable insights for advancing experimental implementations in this field. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.06912 |