Strongly enhanced Berry-dipole at topological phase transitions in BiTeI

ORAL

Abstract

Transitions between topologically distinct electronic states have been predicted in different classes of materials and observed in some. A major goal is the identification of measurable properties that directly expose the topological nature of such transitions. Here we focus on the giant-Rashba material bismuth tellurium iodine (BiTeI) which exhibits a pressure-driven phase transition between topological and trivial insulators in three-dimensions. We demonstrate that this transition, which proceeds through an intermediate Weyl semi-metallic state, is accompanied by a giant enhancement of the Berry curvature dipole which can be probed in transport and optoelectronic experiments. From first-principles calculations, we show that the Berrry-dipole --a vector along the polar axis of this material-- has opposite orientations in the trivial and topological insulating phases and peaks at the insulator-to-Weyl critical points, at which the nonlinear Hall conductivity can increase by over two orders of magnitude (arXiv:1805.02680).

Presenters

  • Jorge Facio

    IFW - Dresden, Institute for Theoretical Solid State Physics, IFW Dresden

Authors

  • Jorge Facio

    IFW - Dresden, Institute for Theoretical Solid State Physics, IFW Dresden

  • Dmitri Efremov

    IFW - Dresden, Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research

  • Klaus Koepernik

    IFW - Dresden

  • Jhih-Shih You

    IFW - Dresden, Institute for Theoretical Solid State Physics, IFW Dresden

  • Inti Sodemann

    Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Dresden

  • Jeroen Van den Brink

    IFW Dresden, Institute for Theoretical Solid State Physics, IFW Dresden, IFW - Dresden, Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research