Deconfinement of Mott localized electrons into topological and spin–orbit-coupled Dirac fermions
ORAL
Abstract
We show that stacking 1T-TaSe2 into bilayers can deconfine electrons from a deep Mott insulating state in the monolayer to a system of correlated Dirac fermions subject to sizable spin–orbit coupling in the bilayer. 1T-TaSe2 develops a Star-of-David charge density wave pattern in each layer. When the Star-of-David centers belonging to two adjacent layers are stacked in a honeycomb pattern, the system realizes a generalized Kane–Mele–Hubbard model in a regime where Dirac semimetallic states are subject to significant Mott–Hubbard interactions and spin–orbit coupling. At charge neutrality, the system is close to a quantum phase transition between a quantum spin Hall and an antiferromagnetic insulator. We identify a perpendicular electric field and the twisting angle as two knobs to control topology and spin–orbit coupling in the system. Their combination can drive it across hitherto unexplored grounds of correlated electron physics, including a quantum tricritical point and an exotic first-order topological phase transition.
*We acknowledge funding from DFG via RTG 2247, SFB 1170, DFG grant VA117/15-1, the Cluster of Excellence ct.qmat (EXC 2147), from the European Graphene Flagship and from the Italian Ministry for Research and Education through Grant No. 2017Z8TS5B.
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Presenters
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Tim Wehling
- University of Bremen