Dirac fermions have been studied intensively in condensed matter physics in recent years. Many theoretical predictions critically depend on the number of valleys where the Dirac fermions are realized. In this work, we report the discovery of a two dimensional system with a single valley Dirac cone. We study the transport properties of HgTe quantum wells grown at the critical thickness separating between the topologically trivial and the quantum spin Hall phases. At high magnetic fields, the quantized Hall plateaus demonstrate the presence of a single valley Dirac point in this system. In addition, we clearly observe the linear dispersion of the zero mode spin levels. Also the conductivity at the Dirac point and its temperature dependence can be understood from single valley Dirac fermion physics.Comment: version 2: supplementary material adde
Strained bulk HgTe is a three-dimensional topological insulator, whose surface electrons have a high mobility ( $ 30 000 cm 2 =Vs), while its bulk is effectively free of mobile charge carriers. These properties enable a study of transport through its unconventional surface states without being hindered by a parallel bulk conductance. Here, we show transport experiments on HgTe-based Josephson junctions to investigate the appearance of the predicted Majorana states at the interface between a topological insulator and a superconductor. Interestingly, we observe a dissipationless supercurrent flow through the topological surface states of HgTe. The current-voltage characteristics are hysteretic at temperatures below 1 K, with critical supercurrents of several microamperes. Moreover, we observe a magnetic-field-induced Fraunhofer pattern of the critical supercurrent, indicating a dominant 2-periodic Josephson effect in the unconventional surface states. Our results show that strained bulk HgTe is a promising material system to get a better understanding of the Josephson effect in topological surface states, and to search for the manifestation of zero-energy Majorana states in transport experiments.
The surface quantum Hall state, magneto-electric phenomena and their connection to axion electrodynamics have been studied intensively for topological insulators. One of the obstacles for observing such effects comes from nonzero conductivity of the bulk. To overcome this obstacle we propose to use an external magnetic field to suppress the conductivity of the bulk carriers. The magnetic field dependence of galvanomagnetic and electromagnetic responses of the whole system shows anomalies due to broken time-reversal symmetry of the surface quantum Hall state, which can be used for its detection. In particular, we find negative linear dc magnetoresistivity and a quadratic field dependence of the Hall angle, shifted rf cyclotron resonance, nonanalytic microwave transmission coefficient and saturation of the Faraday rotation angle with increasing magnetic field or wave frequency.
We use Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID) microscopy to characterize the current-phase relation (CPR) of Josephson Junctions from 3-dimentional topological insulator HgTe (3D-HgTe). We find clear skewness in the CPRs of HgTe junctions ranging in length from 200 nm to 600 nm. The skewness indicates that the Josephson current is predominantly carried by Andreev bound states with high transmittance, and the fact that the skewness persists in junctions that are longer than the mean free path suggests that the effect may be related to the helical nature of the Andreev bound states in the surface of HgTe.Topological insulators (TI) have a special band structure with important consequences for proximity-induced superconductivity. In 3-dimentional topological insulators (3D-TI), the inversion of the conduction and valence bands leads to conducting 2D surface states with energies that are linearly proportional to their momenta [1][2][3][4][5]. Spinmomentum locking protects the charge carriers at the surface against elastic backscattering [6,7]. These special properties are reflected in the superconducting proximity effect in an S/3D-TI bilayer or an S/TI/S junction, which may host Majorana fermions in a quasi-1D channel or vortex core [8][9][10]. Most previous works characterized current-voltage characteristics to determine the critical current's dependence on temperature, gate voltage, or magnetic field [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22], while a few studies characterized the CPR [23,24].Here, we use a scanning SQUID microscope to perform contactless measurements of the diamagnetic response of Nb/HgTe bilayers and of the CPR of Nb/HgTe/Nb junctions. In contrast to previous CPR results [23,24], we find no evidence for bulk states, 2 and we observe that the CPRs of many junctions of different sizes consistently exhibit forward skewness.The CPR in an S/TI/S junction is a key diagnostic [8,[25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32]. Weak disorder in the TI far from the superconducting contacts theoretically does not affect the induced superconducting state [33,34]; therefore, Andreev bound states should form in hightransmittance surface channels [8,26,27,29,31]. A CPR with forward skewness -that is, a deviation from a perfect sinusoidal form -is a signature of such high-transmittance Andreev bound states [35][36][37].To our knowledge, there have not been direct observations of forward skewed CPRs in topological insulators [23,24], although the skewness has been indirectly inferred [24] from the Fraunhofer interference pattern. Previous CPR experiments in topological insulators [23,24] were complicated in part by bulk states, self-inductance effects, and bias voltage, factors that are eliminated in this work.Moreover, a skewed CPR can also result from ballistic transport [35]. Measurements in metallic break junctions showed that the CPR approaches the predictions for quantum point contacts in the ballistic limit [38]. In metallic atomic point contacts, the CPR was significantly skewed only in contacts wi...
The electrodynamics of topological insulators (TIs) is described by modified Maxwell's equations, which contain additional terms that couple an electric field to a magnetization and a magnetic field to a polarization of the medium, such that the coupling coefficient is quantized in odd multiples of α/4π per surface. Here we report on the observation of this so-called topological magnetoelectric effect. We use monochromatic terahertz (THz) spectroscopy of TI structures equipped with a semitransparent gate to selectively address surface states. In high external magnetic fields, we observe a universal Faraday rotation angle equal to the fine structure constant α=e2/2hc (in SI units) when a linearly polarized THz radiation of a certain frequency passes through the two surfaces of a strained HgTe 3D TI. These experiments give insight into axion electrodynamics of TIs and may potentially be used for a metrological definition of the three basic physical constants.
The proximity induced pair potential in a topological insulator-superconductor hybrid features an interesting superposition of a conventional spin-singlet component from the superconductor and a spin-triplet one induced by the surface state of the topological insulator. This singlet-triplet superposition can be altered by the presence of a magnetic field. We study the interplay between topological order and superconducting correlations performing a symmetry analysis of the induced pair potential, using Green functions techniques to theoretically describe ballistic junctions between superconductors and topological insulators under magnetic fields. We relate a change in the conductance from a gapped profile into one with a zero-energy peak with the transition into a topologically nontrivial regime where the odd-frequency triplet pairing becomes the dominant component in the pair potential. The nontrivial regime, which provides a signature of odd-frequency triplet superconductivity, is reached for an out-of-plane effective magnetization with strength comparable to the chemical potential of the superconductor or for an in-plane one, parallel to the normal-superconductor interface, with strength of the order of the superconducting gap. Strikingly, in the latter case, a misalignment with the interface yields an asymmetry with the energy in the conductance unless the total contribution of the topological surface state is considered.
Currently, much effort is being put into detecting unconventional p-wave superconductivity in Josephson junctions based on topological insulators (TIs). For that purpose we propose to use superconducting Klein tunneling, i.e., the reflectionless passage of Cooper pairs through a potential barrier in a gated ballistic junction. This phenomenon occurs due to the fact that the supercurrent is carried by helical Andreev bound states (ABSs) characterized by spin-momentum locking similar to the normal-state carriers. We derive the spectrum of the helical ABSs and the corresponding Josephson current for a junction made on the surface of a three-dimensional TI. The superconducting Klein tunneling is predicted to yield a non-sinusoidal current-phase relation and an anomalous critical current Ic that does not vanish with increasing barrier strength. We also analyze the dependence of the IcRn product (where Rn is the normal-state junction resistance) on the microscopic parameters of the superconductor/TI interface, which leads to lower IcRn values than expected from previous models of the proximity-effect Josephson junctions.PACS numbers:
31 85141In a topological insulator (TI) the character of electron transport varies from insulating in the interior of the material to metallic near its surface. Unlike, however, ordinary metals, conducting surface states in TIs are topologically protected and characterized by spin helicity whereby the direction of the electron spin is locked to the momentum direction. In this paper we review selected topics regarding recent theoretical and experimental work on electron transport and related phenomena in two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) TIs.The review provides a focused introductory discussion of the quantum spin Hall effect in HgTe quantum wells as well as transport properties of 3DTIs such as surface weak antilocalization, the half-integer quantum Hall effect, s þ p-wave induced superconductivity, superconducting Klein tunneling, topological Andreev bound states and related Majorana midgap states. These properties of TIs are of practical interest, guiding the search for the routes towards topological spin electronics. 1 Introduction The situation when a material behaves as a metal in terms of its electric conductivity and, at the same time, as an insulator in terms of its band structure is extremely unconventional from the viewpoint of the standard classification of solids. That is why the recent discovery of a class of such materials -topological insulators (TIs) -has generated much interest (see e.g., reviews [1,2]). The dual properties of the TIs are especially well pronounced in two-dimensional (2D) systems which are also known as quantum spin-Hall insulators (QSHIs) [3][4][5][6][7]. In QSHIs, the metallic electric conduction is associated with propagating states that occur only near the sample edges, while the conduction in the interior is suppressed by a band gap like in ordinary band insulators. These edge states originate from intrinsic spin-orbit (SO) coupling and are profoundly different from those appearing in quantum Hall systems in a strong perpendicular magnetic field [8,9]. The key distinction lies in the role of the time reversal symmetry. In the QSHIs the SO coupling preserves the time-reversal symmetry, resulting in a pair of counter-propagating channels on the same edge as opposed to one-way directed (chiral) edge states in quantum Hall systems. Remarkably, the spin and momentum directions of the two QSHI edge channels are locked in the opposite ways so that these states are characterized by opposite spin helicities and orthogonal
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