pith. sign in

arxiv: 1807.01301 · v1 · pith:O42HSBD2new · submitted 2018-07-03 · ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall

Anomalous behavior of the electronic structure of (Bi_(1-x)In_x)₂Se₃ across the quantum-phase transition from topological to trivial insulator

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords surfacetopologicalquantum-phasetransitiontrivialacrossinsulatorpoint
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Using spin- and angle-resolved spectroscopy and relativistic many-body calculations, we investigate the evolution of the electronic structure of (Bi$_{1-x}$In$_x$)$_2$Se$_3$ bulk single crystals around the critical point of the trivial to topological insulator quantum-phase transition. By increasing $x$, we observe how a surface gap opens at the Dirac point of the initially gapless topological surface state of Bi$_2$Se$_3$, leading to the existence of massive fermions. The surface gap monotonically increases for a wide range of $x$ values across the topological and trivial sides of the quantum-phase transition. By means of photon-energy dependent measurements, we demonstrate that the gapped surface state survives the inversion of the bulk bands which occurs at a critical point near $x=0.055$. The surface state exhibits a non-zero in-plane spin polarization which decays exponentially with increasing $x$, and that persists on both the topological and trivial insulator phases. Its out-of-plane spin polarization remains zero demonstrating the absence of a hedgehog spin texture expected from broken time-reversal symmetry. Our calculations reveal qualitative agreement with the experimental results all across the quantum-phase transition upon the systematic variation of the spin-orbit coupling strength. A non-time reversal symmetry breaking mechanism of bulk-mediated scattering processes that increase with decreasing spin-orbit coupling strength is proposed as explanation.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.