178 research outputs found
Low temperature saturation of phase coherence length in topological insulators
Implementing topological insulators as elementary units in quantum
technologies requires a comprehensive understanding of the dephasing mechanisms
governing the surface carriers in these materials, which impose a practical
limit to the applicability of these materials in such technologies requiring
phase coherent transport. To investigate this, we have performed
magneto-resistance (MR) and conductance fluctuations\ (CF) measurements in both
exfoliated and molecular beam epitaxy grown samples. The phase breaking length
() obtained from MR shows a saturation below sample dependent
characteristic temperatures, consistent with that obtained from CF
measurements. We have systematically eliminated several factors that may lead
to such behavior of in the context of TIs, such as finite size
effect, thermalization, spin-orbit coupling length, spin-flip scattering, and
surface-bulk coupling. Our work indicates the need to identify an alternative
source of dephasing that dominates at low in topological insulators,
causing saturation in the phase breaking length and time
Local optical control of ferromagnetism and chemical potential in a topological insulator
Many proposed experiments involving topological insulators (TIs) require
spatial control over time-reversal symmetry and chemical potential. We
demonstrate reconfigurable micron-scale optical control of both magnetization
(which breaks time-reversal symmetry) and chemical potential in ferromagnetic
thin films of Cr-(Bi,Sb)Te grown on SrTiO. By optically modulating
the coercivity of the films, we write and erase arbitrary patterns in their
remanent magnetization, which we then image with Kerr microscopy. Additionally,
by optically manipulating a space charge layer in the underlying SrTiO
substrates, we control the local chemical potential of the films. This optical
gating effect allows us to write and erase p-n junctions in the films, which we
study with photocurrent microscopy. Both effects are persistent and may be
patterned and imaged independently on a few-micron scale. Dynamic optical
control over both magnetization and chemical potential of a TI may be useful in
efforts to understand and control the edge states predicted at magnetic domain
walls in quantum anomalous Hall insulators.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
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