• Higher-order topology found in 2D crysta

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Jul 15 21:30:24 2020
    Higher-order topology found in 2D crystal

    Date:
    July 15, 2020
    Source:
    Pohang University of Science & Technology (POSTECH)
    Summary:
    The research team took a new approach by using the Josephson
    junctions to spatially resolve the supercurrent flow and to
    show that WTe2 does indeed appear to have hinge states and be a
    higher-order topological insulator.

    They have identified a new higher-order topological insulator. It
    is a layered two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenide
    (TMDC) called WTe2. This is a famous material in condensed matter
    physics that displays a variety of exotic properties from titanic
    magnetoresistance to quantized spin hall effect.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    Over the last decade, the field of condensed matter physics has
    experienced a golden age with the discovery of new materials and
    properties, and related technologies being developed at breakneck speed
    thanks to the arrival of topological physics. Topological physics took off
    in 2008 with the discovery of topological insulator, a type of material
    that is electrically insulating in the bulk but metallic on the surface.


    ========================================================================== Since then, scientists have found more exotic topological phases including Dirac semimetals, Weyl semimetals and Axionic insulators. But most
    recently, materials that are insulating in the bulk, on surfaces and
    edges but are metallic only on the hinges or at the corners have been theoretically predicted. These bizarre new materials called higher-order topological insulators are extremely rare and only the element bismuth
    has been experimentally proven to possibly belong to this category so far.

    What is a hinge state anyway? Imagine a box -- longer and wider than
    tall - - with flaps on top and bottom that you can open to put things
    inside. The space inside the box would be called the bulk. Most materials
    which conduct electricity do so in the bulk. However, in topological insulators, the bulk of the box is electrically insulating but the top
    and bottom -- the flaps -- are metallic and maintain surface states. For
    some materials, the bulk, the top and bottom of the box are insulating
    but the sides (edges) are metallic. These have edge states which have
    been demonstrated in magnetic topological insulators.

    Finally, in higher-order topological insulators, the bulk, top, bottom
    and sides of the box are all insulating but the hinges and corners of the
    box are metallic and have disparate hinge or corner states. These hinge
    states have also been predicted to exist in topological semimetals like bismuth. The hinge states in particular are expected to be promising for
    the study of spintronics because the direction of their propagation is
    tied to their spin as well as for Majorana fermions which are actively
    being investigated for their applications to fault-tolerant quantum
    computing.

    Now an international team of scientists from the United States, Hong
    Kong, Germany, and South Korea have identified a new higher-order
    topological insulator. It is a layered two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) called WTe2. This is a famous material in condensed matter physics that displays a variety of exotic properties from titanic magnetoresistance to quantized spin hall effect. It was the first example
    of a Type-II Weyl semimetal that can be made into devices that are only
    one layer in thickness and is exfoliatable like graphene. WTe2 has also
    shown to superconduct under pressure which means electrons form pairs
    and a supercurrent travels through it without any resistance.

    Adding to this carnival of properties, theoretical physicists in
    2019 envisioned WTe2 and its sister material MoTe2 to be higher-order topological insulators with metallic hinge states. Many research teams
    around the world have since searched for evidence of these exotic states
    in WTe2 and MoTe2 and some recent results have shown that there are
    extra conductive states at their edges. But the researchers were unable
    to identify if these were truly edge states or the highly sought-after
    hinge states.

    In a study published in Nature Materials on July 6, 2020, the team led
    by Kin Chung Fong (Raytheon BBN Technologies), Mazhar N. Ali (Max Plank Institute of Microstructure Physics and also Material Mind Inc.), Kam
    Tuen Law (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) and Gil-Ho Lee (Pohang University of Science and Technology, and the Asia Pacific Center
    for Theoretical Physics) took a new approach by using the Josephson
    junctions to spatially resolve the supercurrent flow and to show that
    WTe2 does indeed appear to have hinge states and be a higher-order
    topological insulator (Link to paper).



    ========================================================================== Josephson junctions are an incredibly important device and tool in
    physics.

    They are used in a variety of technological applications including
    magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines as well as in qubits, which
    are building blocks of quantum computers. These junctions are formed
    when two superconducting electrodes like niobium (Nb) are connected by
    a non- superconducting bridge like a high-quality WTe2 in a thin film
    device. When the temperature is lowered enough, the supercurrent that
    is injected from one Nb electrode can travel across the bridge without resistance to the other Nb electrode. Therefore the overall device shows
    zero resistance and is said to be superconducting.

    However, no infinite amount of supercurrent can be sent across the bridge
    while retaining superconductivity. When the injected current exceeds a
    critical current, the junction turns into a normal state and exhibits
    finite resistance.

    The Josephson effect states that as a function of the applied magnetic
    field, the critical current will oscillate in a Fraunhofer pattern between
    high and low values due to the changing phase of the superconducting wave-function across the sample.

    The team realized that hidden in this oscillation is location information
    of the supercurrent while it travels in the sample. By taking an inverse Fourier transform of the Fraunhofer pattern, the researchers were able to visualize the supercurrent flow in the sample and found that it indeed
    travels on the sides of the WTe2 device. However, this was not enough
    to distinguish the edge states from the hinge states.

    As shown in the figure below, due to a quirk in the symmetry-based origin
    of the hinge states, not all hinges are identical on the WTe2 sample. For example, there are metallic hinge states on top left and bottom right
    hinges on the sample but not on the top right or bottom left. This is
    different from an edge state, which would simply be existing on the
    entirety of the left and right sides of the sample. Regarding this,
    Kin Chung Fong of Raytheon BBN Technologies explains, "We used this
    difference to our advantage. By connecting superconducting electrodes
    on just the top half of the sample and not the bottom half, we realized
    we would see a different Fraunhofer pattern if hinge states existed
    and not edge states." He further commented, "In this configuration,
    electrodes would connect to only one of the hinge states (i.e.

    top left and not bottom right), which would show a distinct Fraunhofer
    pattern.

    If there were edge states, this configuration wouldn't be any different
    than connecting to both the bottom and top halves of the sample and the Fraunhofer would look the same." When they carried out this challenging experiment, they observed the hallmark of the hinge state, not the
    edge state.

    "But that's not all. WTe2 is a fairly low-symmetry orthorhombic material
    with high crystalline anisotropy. The different directions in the crystal
    are not equivalent and we also theorized and confirmed that the hinge
    states existing in WTe2 aren't all equivalent either. In some directions,
    they mix into the bulk while in other directions they don't," explained
    Kam Tuen Law at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

    "There is a variety of exciting physics to be explored in these compounds
    in the near future now that hinge states have been found in WTe2,"
    remarked Gil Ho Lee of Pohang University of Science and Technology. He
    added, "The possibility for dissipationless interconnections, true
    1D superconducting nano-wires and spintronics devices, topological superconductivity, Majorana fermions and correspondingly topological
    quantum computers are all on the horizon." Mazhar N. Ali at the Max
    Plank Institute of Microstructure Physics explained, "WTe2 may be the
    second material shown to host hinge states, but it is very different
    from the other candidate, bismuth. Being 2D, WTe2 is easily fabricable
    into nano-devices with controlled surfaces, and can be layered on top of
    other 2D materials in heterostructures and even on top of itself when
    slightly twisted to form a Moire superlattice." He added, "Its sister
    material MoTe2 is expected to exhibit the same hinge states but it is an intrinsic superconductor at low temperatures." He questioned excitedly,
    "How can these hinge states be modified, controlled, and used? There
    are a lot of exciting research opportunities ahead."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Pohang_University_of_Science_&_Technology_(POSTECH).

    Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Yong-Bin Choi, Yingming Xie, Chui-Zhen Chen, Jinho Park, Su-Beom
    Song,
    Jiho Yoon, B. J. Kim, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe,
    Jonghwan Kim, Kin Chung Fong, Mazhar N. Ali, Kam Tuen Law,
    Gil-Ho Lee. Evidence of higher-order topology in multilayer WTe2
    from Josephson coupling through anisotropic hinge states. Nature
    Materials, 2020; DOI: 10.1038/s41563- 020-0721-9 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200715111426.htm

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