Interacting multi-channel topological boundary modes in a quantum Hall valley system
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum Hall ferromagnets (QHFMs) are two-dimensional electronic phases with spontaneously broken spin or pseudospin symmetry whose wavefunctions also have topological properties. Domain walls between distinct broken symmetry QHFM phases are predicted to host gapless one-dimensional (1D) modes that emerge due to a topological change of the underlying electronic wavefunctions at such interfaces. Although a variety of QHFMs have been identified in different materials, probing interacting electronic modes at these domain walls has not yet been accomplished. Here we use a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) to directly visualize the spontaneous formation of boundary modes, within a sign-changing topological gap, at domain walls between different valley-polarized quantum Hall phases on the surface of bismuth. By changing the valley occupation and the corresponding number of modes at the domain wall, we can realize different regimes where the valley-polarized channels are either metallic or develop a spectroscopic gap. This behavior is a consequence of Coulomb interactions constrained by the symmetry-breaking valley flavor, which determines whether electrons in the topological modes can backscatter, making these channels a unique class of interacting Luttinger liquids.
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Presenters
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Mallika Randeria
Princeton University
Authors
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Mallika Randeria
Princeton University
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Kartiek Agarwal
McGill University, Princeton University
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Benjamin Ezekiel Feldman
Stanford University
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Hao Ding
Princeton University
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Huiwen Ji
Princeton University
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Robert Cava
Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton University, Chemistry, Princeton U., Chemistry, Princeton University
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Shivaji Sondhi
Princeton University, Princeton University, Princeton NJ
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Siddharth A Parameswaran
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford, Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, Oxford University, University of Oxford
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Ali Yazdani
Princeton University, Physics department, Princeton University