Unexpected edge conduction in mercury telluride quantum wells under broken time-reversal symmetry

The realization of quantum spin Hall effect in HgTe quantum wells is considered a milestone in the discovery of topological insulators. Quantum spin Hall states are predicted to allow current flow at the edges of an insulating bulk, as demonstrated in various experiments. A key prediction yet to be...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2015-05, Vol.6 (1), p.7252-7252, Article 7252
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Eric Yue, Calvo, M. Reyes, Wang, Jing, Lian, Biao, Mühlbauer, Mathias, Brüne, Christoph, Cui, Yong-Tao, Lai, Keji, Kundhikanjana, Worasom, Yang, Yongliang, Baenninger, Matthias, König, Markus, Ames, Christopher, Buhmann, Hartmut, Leubner, Philipp, Molenkamp, Laurens W., Zhang, Shou-Cheng, Goldhaber-Gordon, David, Kelly, Michael A., Shen, Zhi-Xun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The realization of quantum spin Hall effect in HgTe quantum wells is considered a milestone in the discovery of topological insulators. Quantum spin Hall states are predicted to allow current flow at the edges of an insulating bulk, as demonstrated in various experiments. A key prediction yet to be experimentally verified is the breakdown of the edge conduction under broken time-reversal symmetry. Here we first establish a systematic framework for the magnetic field dependence of electrostatically gated quantum spin Hall devices. We then study edge conduction of an inverted quantum well device under broken time-reversal symmetry using microwave impedance microscopy, and compare our findings to a non-inverted device. At zero magnetic field, only the inverted device shows clear edge conduction in its local conductivity profile, consistent with theory. Surprisingly, the edge conduction persists up to 9 T with little change. This indicates physics beyond simple quantum spin Hall model, including material-specific properties and possibly many-body effects. Quantum spin Hall edge states are protected by time-reversal symmetry and are expected to disappear in a strong magnetic field. Here, the authors use microwave impedance microscopy and find, surprisingly, edge conduction in mercury telluride quantum wells that survives up to 9 T with little change.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms8252