First Principles Study on Topological-Phase Transition in Ferroelectric Oxides
POSTER
Abstract
Graphene is known as a 2D topological insulator with zero energy gap and Dirac cone. In this study, we theoretically designed a honeycomb structure of Au ions embedded in a ferroelectric host oxide, in order to exploit structural distortions to control topological properties. We show that the polar structural distortion induces the emergence of spin-valley coupling, together with a topological transition from a quantum spin-Hall insulating phase to a trivial band insulator. The phase transition also affects the Berry curvature and spin-valley selection rules. Analogously to graphene, the microscopic origin of this topological phase is ascribed to a spin-valley-sublattice coupling, which arises from the interplay between trigonal crystal field and an ``effective'' spin-orbit interaction due to virtual excitations between e$_{\mathrm{g}}$ and t$_{\mathrm{2g}}$ states of transition-metal ions.
Authors
-
Kunihiko Yamauchi
ISIR-Sanken, Osaka University, Japan
-
Paolo Barone
Graphene Labs, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Italy
-
Silvia Picozzi
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR-SPIN), Italy