Quantum Hall effect and magnetic topological phase transition in ultra-low carrier density Sb<sub>2</sub>Te<sub>3</sub> films
ORAL
Abstract
In 2014, the quantum Hall effect (QHE) originated from topological surface states (TSS) was observed for back-gated BiSbTeSe2 single-crystal and shortly after for back-gated MBE-grown (Bi1−xSbx)2Te3 films. A year later, with the aid of proper insulating buffer-layer as a growth template along with novel growth methodology, we reported TSS-originated QHE in large area defect-suppressed MBE-grown Bi2Se3 films (sheet carrier density as low as ~7×1011 /cm2) with vanishing longitudinal resistance in absence of gating and without adding impurity. However, for all aforementioned cases, a high magnetic field was required to observe the QHE phenomena. Extending the buffer- layer scheme to telluride system allowed us to achieve Sb2Te3 thin films with even lower defect density (carrier density as low as ~1.5×1011 /cm2) which eventually led to observation of QHE (without application of gating) at much lower magnetic field of ~5T which is ~5 times lower than the required field for observing QHE in pure binary selenide system of Bi2Se3. Moreover, these samples demonstrate topological phase transition under higher magnetic fields. In this talk, I will discuss the growth procedure and novel magneto-transport properties of these ultra-low defect-density Sb2Te3 films.
*Gordon & Betty Moore,NSF
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Presenters
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Maryam Salehi
- Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers University
- Material Science and Engineering, Rutgers University
- Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers Univ
- Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
- Rutgers University