Engineering order-disorder transitions at the surface of topological insulators

Abdulhakim Bake

Abdulhakim Bake, UOW

The conducting boundary states of topological insulators appear at an interface where the characteristic invariant ℤ2 switches from 1 to 0. These states offer prospects for quantum electronics; however, a method is needed to spatially-control ℤ2 to pattern conducting channels. It is shown that modifying Sb2Te3 single-crystal surfaces with an ion beam switches the topological insulator into an amorphous state exhibiting negligible bulk and surface conductivity.

This is attributed to a transition from ℤ2 = 1 → ℤ2 = 0 at a threshold disorder strength. This observation is supported by density functional theory and model Hamiltonian calculations. Here we show that this ion-beam treatment allows for inverse lithography to pattern arrays of topological surfaces, edges and corners which are the building blocks of topological electronics.

About the presenter

Abdulhakim is a PhD student working with Associate Investigator David Cortie to undertake a PhD focused on magnetic materials,ion beam implantation techniques, modification of topological insulators, and device fabrication using focused ion beam microscope.