Evidence for a higher-order topological insulator in a three-dimensional material built from van der Waals stacking of bismuth-halide chains

Low-dimensional van der Waals materials have been extensively studied as a platform with which to generate quantum effects. Advancing this research, topological quantum materials with van der Waals structures are currently receiving a great deal of attention. Here, we use the concept of designing to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature materials 2021-04, Vol.20 (4), p.473-479
Hauptverfasser: Noguchi, Ryo, Kobayashi, Masaru, Jiang, Zhanzhi, Kuroda, Kenta, Takahashi, Takanari, Xu, Zifan, Lee, Daehun, Hirayama, Motoaki, Ochi, Masayuki, Shirasawa, Tetsuroh, Zhang, Peng, Lin, Chun, Bareille, Cédric, Sakuragi, Shunsuke, Tanaka, Hiroaki, Kunisada, So, Kurokawa, Kifu, Yaji, Koichiro, Harasawa, Ayumi, Kandyba, Viktor, Giampietri, Alessio, Barinov, Alexei, Kim, Timur K., Cacho, Cephise, Hashimoto, Makoto, Lu, Donghui, Shin, Shik, Arita, Ryotaro, Lai, Keji, Sasagawa, Takao, Kondo, Takeshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low-dimensional van der Waals materials have been extensively studied as a platform with which to generate quantum effects. Advancing this research, topological quantum materials with van der Waals structures are currently receiving a great deal of attention. Here, we use the concept of designing topological materials by the van der Waals stacking of quantum spin Hall insulators. Most interestingly, we find that a slight shift of inversion centre in the unit cell caused by a modification of stacking induces a transition from a trivial insulator to a higher-order topological insulator. Based on this, we present angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy results showing that the real three-dimensional material Bi 4 Br 4 is a higher-order topological insulator. Our demonstration that various topological states can be selected by stacking chains differently, combined with the advantages of van der Waals materials, offers a playground for engineering topologically non-trivial edge states towards future spintronics applications. Angle-resolved photoemission evidence for a three-dimensional higher-order topological insulator is presented. This work demonstrates that stacking configurations can be utilized to realize different topological phases.
ISSN:1476-1122
1476-4660
DOI:10.1038/s41563-020-00871-7