Blurring the boundaries between topological and non-topological phenomena in dots

ORAL

Abstract

In this work we investigate the electronic and transport properties of topological and non-topological InAs0.85Bi0.15 quantum dots (QDs) described by a Bernevig-Hughes-Zhang (BHZ) model with cylindrical confinement, i.e., "BHZ dots''. We analytically show that {\it non-topological} dots have discrete helical edge states, i.e., Kramers pairs with spin-angular-momentum locking similar to topological dots. These unusual and unexpectedly non-topological edge states are geometrically protected due to confinement in a wide range of parameters and are not guaranteed to exist by the bulk-edge correspondence. In addition, for a conduction window with four edge states, we find that the two-terminal conductance G vs. the QD radius R and the gate Vg controlling its levels shows a double peak at 2e2/h for both topological and trivial BHZ QDs. Our results blur the boundaries between topological and non-topological phenomena for conductance measurements in small systems such as QDs thus showing an equivalence between the BHZ QDs in different topological phases.

*This work was supported by CNPq, CAPES, UFRN/MEC, FAPESP, PRP-USP/Q-NANO and the Center for Emergent Materials, an NSF MRSEC under Award No. DMR-1420451.

Presenters

  • Denis Candido

    • Sao Carlos Institute of Physics at the University of Sao Paulo

Authors

  • Denis Candido

    • Sao Carlos Institute of Physics at the University of Sao Paulo
  • Michael Flatté

    • Optical Science and Technology Center and Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy and Optical Science and Technology Center, University of Iowa
    • Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa, Iowa City
    • University of Iowa
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa
    • Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa
  • Carlos Egues

    • Sao Carlos Institute of Physics at the University of Sao Paulo