Surface-Dominated Transport on a Bulk Topological Insulator

ORAL

Abstract

Topological insulators are guaranteed to support metallic surface states on an insulating bulk, and one should thus expect that the electronic transport in these materials is dominated by the surfaces states. Alas, due to the high remaining bulk conductivity, surface contributions to transport have so-far only been singled out indirectly via quantum oscillation, or for devices based on gated and doped topological insulator thin films, a situation in which the surface carrier mobility could be limited by defect and interface scattering. Here we present a direct measurement of surface-dominated conduction on an atomically clean surface of Bi$_2$Te$_2$Se. Using nano-scale four point setups with variable contact distance, we show that the transport at 30~K is two-dimensional rather than three-dimensional and by combining these measurements with angle-resolved photoemission results from the same crystals, we find a surface state mobility of 390(30)~cm$^{2}$V$^{-1}$s$^{-1}$ at 30~K at a carrier concentration of 8.71(7)$\times 10^{12}$~cm$^{-2}$.

Authors

  • Philip Hofmann

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University
    • Aarhus University
  • Lucas Barreto

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University
  • Lisa K\"uhnemund

    • Institut f\"ur Festk\"orperphysik, Leibniz Universit\"at Hannover
  • Frederik Edler

    • Institut f\"ur Festk\"orperphysik, Leibniz Universit\"at Hannover
  • Christoph Tegenkamp

    • Institut f\"ur Festk\"orperphysik, Leibniz Universit\"at Hannover
  • Jianli Mi

    • Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University
  • Martin Bremholm

    • Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University
  • Bo Brummerstedt Iversen

    • Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University
  • Christian Frydendahl

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University
  • Marco Bianchi

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University