Non-magnetic disorder threshold of the topological state in Sb<sub>2</sub>Te<sub>3</sub> thin films

ORAL

Abstract

We establish a disorder threshold for the topological state in thin films of Sb2Te3 by following the disorder evolution of transport across large range of structural nonmagnetic disorder. Starting at the high disorder end, where 3D transport is found to be governed by dynamic spin correlations, we recover the low disorder state by thermal annealing. Weak antilocalization interference correction (WAL), characteristic of 2D topological transport related to the Berry phase, is recovered at a relatively low disorder level corresponding to Wth = 0.05Eg, where Eg is the bulk gap. The 3D-2D transition coincides with the disappearance of disorder-induced glassy spin correlations, directly measured using micro-Hall sensors. The sharp onset of magnetic response appears independent of disorder, consistent with the presence of FM clusters with TC ~ 200 K that shrink in size as disorder is reduced. At Wth, transport is dominated by crystalline regions with minimal spin scattering, thereby supplying a percolative path for the carriers to travel along, with conductance of about G0=e2/h . We discuss the role of spin relaxation in inducing the dimensionality transition into the topological state.

*NSF-DMR-1420634, NSF-DMR-1312483-MWN, and NSF-HRD-1547830

Presenters

  • Shihua Zhao

    • City College of New York - CUNY
    • Physics, City College of New York -CUNY
    • City College of New York

Authors

  • Shihua Zhao

    • City College of New York - CUNY
    • Physics, City College of New York -CUNY
    • City College of New York
  • Inna Korzhovska

    • City College of New York - CUNY
    • City College of New York
  • Zhiyi Chen

    • Physics, City College of New York -CUNY
    • City College of New York
  • Haiming Deng

    • Physics, City College of New York -CUNY
    • City College of New York
  • Lukas Zhao

    • City College of New York
  • Marcin Konczykowski

    • Ecole Polytechnique
  • Simone Raoux

    • Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin
  • Lia Krusin-Elbaum

    • City College of New York - CUNY
    • Physics, City College of New York -CUNY
    • City College of New York