In-situ control of topological phase transitions in Cd<sub>3</sub>As<sub>2</sub> detected via the circular photogalvanic effect

ORAL

Abstract

Topological devices have garnered intense interest over the previous decades, attributed to their suppressed backscattering, versatile spin texture, strong spin-orbit coupling, chemical robustness, and symmetry protected states. Dirac semimetal Cd3As2 is a member of the topological semimetal family and possesses these characteristics on top of an attractively long spin diffusion length. Topological phase transitions can be achieved reversibly through control over breaking certain symmetries, including crystal inversion and time reversal.

Spin injection via circularly polarized light is a nonintrusive and efficient method of utilizing spin properties in quantum device and spintronics applications and can be accomplished by an assortment of mechanisms, including the circular photogalvanic effect (CPGE). CPGE induced helicity dependent photocurrent modulation requires broken inversion symmetry, and thus can be used to probe topological phase transitions as the modulation is switched on and off. Recently, a local transition from Dirac semimetal to topological insulator was reported in Cd3As2 near the vicinity of the metal-semimetal interface, where a strong in-plane Schottky field locally breaks inversion symmetry. Using scanning photocurrent microscopy, we further explore means of controlling phase transitions in-situ via liquid ion top gating, strain, and doping.

*This work was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation Grant DMR-2105161 and DMR-1832728. Device fabrication was partially carried out at the Molecular Foundry, which is funded by the Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. Part of this study was carried out at the UC Davis Center for Nano and Micro Manufacturing (CNM2).

Publication: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2210.03819, manuscript in submission process.

Presenters

  • Bob M Wang

    • University of California, Davis

Authors

  • Bob M Wang

    • University of California, Davis
  • Dong Yu

    • University of California, Davis
  • Henry C Travaglini

    • University of California, Davis
  • Yuqing Zhu

    • University of California, Davis
  • Sergey Y Savrasov

    • University of California, Davis