Title: Topological Insulators
1Topological Insulators
- Jason Lambert
- University of Tennessee
- Department of Physics
2Outline
- Topological Invariants and State of matter
- The Quantum Hall Effect ( QHE )
- The Quantum Spin Hall Effect ( QHSE )
- Experimental Realization QHSE
- Exotic Physics
3Prediction
- I predict that some worker in this field will win
the big prize!!!
4Topological States of Matter
M. Z. Hasan and C. L. Kane, arXiv(Febuary 2010)
5Topological States of Matter
Chiral Symmetry
Particle Hole Symmetry
Topological classification
Dimensionality
Time Reversal Symmetry
QHE
QHSE
6The Quantum Hall Effect
- Discovered in 1980 by Klaus von Klitzing.
- Nobel Prize awarded in 1985.
- Extremely accurate resistance is now used as a
NIST standard
K. v. Klitzing, G. Dorda, and M. Pepper, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 45, 494 (Aug. 1980)
7Quantum Hall Effect
- The resistance in the y direction quantized.
- Resistance in the xy direction goes to zero
8Topological Invariant of QHE
- Topological invariant referred as the TKNN
invariant. - Determined from the integral of the Brillouin
zone. - The topology of the manifold of occupied states
distinguishes the quantum hall state and
conventional insulator
M. Z. Hasan and C. L. Kane, arXiv(Febuary 2010)
9Quantum Spin Hall effect
- The QSHE effect has quantized conduction bands
due to surface states. - The electrons are spin polarized depending upon
direction of flow.
C. Day, Physics Today 61, 19 (2008)
10Quantum Spin Hall Effect
- Requires a linearly dispersing edge state
- also known as a dirac cone
- Bulk Valence and conduction bands are connected
by the surface conducting states
C. Day, Physics Today 61, 19 (2008)
11QSHE
- The surface states of the quantum spin hall
effect are protected by time reversal symmetry - There must be an odd number of dirac cones in the
Brillouin zone.
12Is this a strong topological insulator?
- In three dimensional systems you can have both
strong and weak topological insulators - We want strong topological insulators.
- Determining the nature of the topological
insulator is not trivial - Easiest method works when material has inversion
symmetry.
13Is this a strong topological insulator?
L. Fu and C. L. Kane, Phys. Rev. B 76, 045302
(Jul. 2007)
H. Zhang, C.-X. Liu, X.-L. Qi, X. Dai, Z. Fang,
and S.-C. Zhang, Nat Phys 5, 438 (Jun. 2009)
14Experimental Realization
- Looking for materials that have a bulk insulating
gap with strong spin orbit coupling. - The spin orbit coupling should be strong enough
to invert the highest valence band and lowest
conduction band. - Need to look toward heavy elements on periodic
table spin orbit coupling is strong
15CdHgTe Quantum wells
- First topological insulator HgTe quantum wells.
M. König et al., Science 318, 766 (2007).
16Second Generation Topological insulators
H. Zhang et al., Nat. Phys. 5, 438 (2009).
Y. Xia et al., Nat. Phys. 5, 398 (2009) D. Hsieh
et al., Science 323, 919 (2009).
17Potential Applications
- Spintronics
- Room temperature dissipation-less
conductionBecause of the perfectly conducting
edge state - Possible applications topological quantum
computing - Table Top testing of the Standard Model
18Physics Exotic
- Majorana Fermions
- Unobserved in nature
- Nuetrinos?
- Predicted to exist in s-wave superconductor TI
boundary - Image Magnetic Monopoles
- Because of unique EM field theory that describes
TI
S.-C. Z. Xiao-Liang Qi, Physics Today 63, 33
(2010)
F. Wilczek, Nature 458, 129 (2009) Nat. Phys. 5,
614 (2009).
19Conclusions
- Topological States of matter including the
topological insulator have become a very Hot
topic. - The second generation materials have a lot of
promise. - Some topological insulator properties are very
applicable - Testing ground exotic physics and the standard
model