4.3 Article

Materials considerations for forming the topological insulator phase in InAs/GaSb heterostructures

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.2.064603

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Microsoft Research Station Q
  2. MRSEC program of the NSF [DMR-1121053, DMR-1720256]
  3. Center for Emergent Materials, a NSF MRSEC [DMR-1420451]

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In an ideal InAs/GaSb bilayer of appropriate dimension, in-plane electron and hole bands overlap and hybridize, and a topologically nontrivial, or quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulator, phase is predicted to exist. The in-plane dispersion's potential landscape, however, is subject to microscopic perturbations originating from material imperfections. In this work, the effect of disorder on the electronic structure of InAs/GaSb (001) bilayers was studied by observing the temperature and magnetic-field dependence of the resistance of a dual-gated heterostructure gate-tuned through the inverted to normal gap regimes. Conduction with the electronic structure tuned to the inverted (predicted topological) regime and the Fermi level in the hybridization gap was qualitatively similar to behavior in a disordered two-dimensional system. The impact of charged impurities and interface roughness on the formation of topologically protected edge states and an insulating bulk was estimated. The experimental evidence and estimates of disorder in the potential landscape indicated that the potential fluctuations in state-of-the-art films are sufficiently strong such that conduction with the electronic structure tuned to the predicted topological insulator (TI) regime and the Fermi level in the hybridization gap was dominated by a symplectic metal phase rather than a TI phase. The implications are that future efforts must address disorder in this system, and focus must be placed on the reduction of defects and disorder in these heterostructures if a TI regime is to be achieved.

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