Three-Dimensional Quantum Anomalous Hall Effect in Magnetic Topological Insulator Trilayers of Hundred-Nanometer Thickness

ORAL

Abstract

Magnetic topological states refer to a class of exotic phases in magnetic materials with their non-trivial topological property determined by magnetic spin configurations. An example of such states is the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state, which is a zero magnetic field manifestation of the quantum Hall effect. Current research in this direction focuses on QAH insulators with a thickness of less than 10 nm. The thick QAH insulators in the three-dimensional (3D) regime are limited, largely due to inevitable bulk carriers being introduced in thick magnetic TI samples. Here, we employ molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) to synthesize magnetic TI trilayers with a thickness of up to ~106 nm. We find these samples exhibit well-quantized Hall resistance and vanishing longitudinal resistance at zero magnetic field. By varying magnetic dopants, gate voltages, temperature, and external magnetic fields, we examine the properties of these thick QAH insulators and demonstrate the robustness of the 3D QAH effect. The realization of the well-quantized 3D QAH effect indicates that the side surface states of our thick magnetic TI trilayers are gapped and thus do not affect the QAH quantization. The 3D QAH insulators of hundred-nanometer thickness provide a promising platform for the exploration of fundamental physics, including axion physics and image magnetic monopole, and the advancement of electronic and spintronic devices to circumvent Moore’s law.

* This work is supported by the NSF grant (DMR-2241327), ARO Award (W911NF2210159), Betty Moore Foundation’s EPiQS Initiative (GBMF9063 to C. -Z. C.), Penn State MRSEC for Nanoscale Science (DMR-2011839), and DOE grant (DE-SC0023113). Work done at NHMFL is supported by NSF (DMR-2128556) and the State of Florida.

Presenters

  • Yi-Fan Zhao

    Pennsylvania State University

Authors

  • Yi-Fan Zhao

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Ruoxi Zhang

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Zi-Ting Sun

    The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

  • Ling-Jie Zhou

    Pennsylvania State University, The Pennsylvania State University

  • Deyi Zhuo

    Pennsylvania State University, The Pennsylvania State University

  • Zi-Jie Yan

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University

  • Hemian Yi

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Ke Wang

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University

  • Moses H Chan

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Chaoxing Liu

    Pennsylvania State University, The Pennsylvania State University

  • Kam Tuen Law

    Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST)

  • Cui-Zu Chang

    Pennsylvania State University, The Pennsylvania State University