Two-dimensional topological insulator behavior in monolayer WTe2

 · Invited

Abstract

The van der Waals layered material WTe2 is a semimetal, with closely matched electron and hole pockets and very strong spin-orbit coupling, which exhibits gigantic magnetoresistance at low temperatures and has topological features its single-particle band structure. Studying WTe2 down to the monolayer limit by exfoliation and encapsulation in hexagonal boron nitride, we find that it exhibits a diverse range of phenomena. In particular, monolayers show edge conduction with properties matching those expected for the helical boundary modes of a two-dimensional topological insulator (producing the quantum spin Hall effect). These include no band gap at zero magnetic field, suppression by an in-plane magnetic field, absence in bilayers, and conductance per edge not exceeding e2/h. However, the conductance never actually reaches e2/h, shows large mesoscopic fluctuations, and falls at dilution fridge temperatures, showing a sub-meV bias threshold for current flow of unknown origin. We also discuss the rather peculiar conductivity behavior of the bulk insulating state, in which electron-hole correlations may be an important factor.

*Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering, Awards DE-SC0002197 and DE-SC0012509; AFOSR FA9550-14-1-0277; and NSF EFRI 2DARE 1433496.

Presenters

  • David Cobden

    • Univ of Washington
    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
    • University of Washington
    • Physics, University of Washington

Authors

  • David Cobden

    • Univ of Washington
    • Department of Physics, University of Washington
    • University of Washington
    • Physics, University of Washington