Topological States in Restrictive Geometries

ORAL

Abstract

Topological Insulators (TIs) are a novel class of materials possessing symmetry-protected surface states that have promising applications in spintronics and quantum computing. The properties and robustness of TI surface states are well understood for macrosopic samples with flat boundaries, but it is not clearly established what features are retained for curved boundaries - especially when the radius of curvature and/or the sample size are decreased and become comparable to the decay length of the surface states. Consequently, here we investigate the nature of the topological surface states for finite samples with curved interfaces. In particular, we study a model of a 2-dimensional TI with circular boundary of radius R, described by a 4 × 4 Dirac-like Hamiltonian. We present exact solutions for the surface states of this system, derive the effective surface Hamiltonian, and discuss the deviations of the dispersion and spin texture from the flat surface case.

*We thank the National Science Foundation for supporting this work through the REU Site in Physics & Astronomy (NSF grant #1560212) at Louisiana State University; we also acknowledge support though NSF grants DMR-1410741 and DMR-1151717.

Presenters

  • Liam O'Brien

    • Department of Physics, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Authors

  • Liam O'Brien

    • Department of Physics, University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Karunya Shirali

    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, Louisiana State University
  • Daniel E Sheehy

    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, Louisiana State University
    • Louisiana State University
  • Ilya Vekhter

    • Louisiana State University
    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, Louisiana State University