6533b86efe1ef96bd12cb433

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Tunable multifunctional topological insulators in ternary Heusler compounds

Gerhard H. FecherClaudia FelserJürgen KüblerStanislav ChadovShou-cheng ZhangXiao-liang QiXiao-liang Qi

subject

SuperconductivityCondensed Matter - Materials ScienceMaterials scienceCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsCondensed matter physicsBand gapbusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringMaterials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)FOS: Physical sciencesDisordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn)General ChemistryCondensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksCondensed Matter PhysicsSemiconductorQuantum spin Hall effectMechanics of MaterialsHall effectTopological insulatorMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)General Materials SciencebusinessTernary operationQuantum well

description

Recently the Quantum Spin Hall effect (QSH) was theoretically predicted and experimentally realized in a quantum wells based on binary semiconductor HgTe[1-3]. QSH state and topological insulators are the new states of quantum matter interesting both for fundamental condensed matter physics and material science[1-11]. Many of Heusler compounds with C1b structure are ternary semiconductors which are structurally and electronically related to the binary semiconductors. The diversity of Heusler materials opens wide possibilities for tuning the band gap and setting the desired band inversion by choosing compounds with appropriate hybridization strength (by lattice parameter) and the magnitude of spin-orbit coupling (by the atomic charge). Based on the first-principle calculations we demonstrate that around fifty Heusler compounds show the band inversion similar to HgTe. The topological state in these zero-gap semiconductors can be created by applying strain or by designing an appropriate quantum well structure, similar to the case of HgTe. Many of these ternary zero-gap semiconductors (LnAuPb, LnPdBi, LnPtSb and LnPtBi) contain the rare earth element Ln which can realize additional properties ranging from superconductivity (e. g. LaPtBi[12]) to magnetism (e. g. GdPtBi[13]) and heavy-fermion behavior (e. g. YbPtBi[14]). These properties can open new research directions in realizing the quantized anomalous Hall effect and topological superconductors.

https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat2770