39 research outputs found
Experimental observation of Dirac-like surface states and topological phase transition in PbSnTe(111) films
The surface of a topological crystalline insulator (TCI) carries an even
number of Dirac cones protected by crystalline symmetry. We epitaxially grew
high quality PbSnTe(111) films and investigated the TCI phase by
in-situ angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. PbSnTe(111)
films undergo a topological phase transition from trivial insulator to TCI via
increasing the Sn/Pb ratio, accompanied by a crossover from n-type to p-type
doping. In addition, a hybridization gap is opened in the surface states when
the thickness of film is reduced to the two-dimensional limit. The work
demonstrates an approach to manipulating the topological properties of TCI,
which is of importance for future fundamental research and applications based
on TCI
KFe_2Se_2 is the parent compound of K-doped iron selenide superconductors
We elucidate the existing controversies in the newly discovered K-doped iron
selenide (KxFe2-ySe2-z) superconductors. The stoichiometric KFe2Se2 with
\surd2\times\surd2 charge ordering was identified as the parent compound of
KxFe2-ySe2-z superconductor using scanning tunneling microscopy and
spectroscopy. The superconductivity is induced in KFe2Se2 by either Se
vacancies or interacting with the anti-ferromagnetic K2Fe4Se5 compound. Totally
four phases were found to exist in KxFe2-ySe2-z: parent compound KFe2Se2,
superconducting KFe2Se2 with \surd2\times\surd5 charge ordering,
superconducting KFe2Se2-z with Se vacancies and insulating K2Fe4Se5 with
\surd5\times\surd5 Fe vacancy order. The phase separation takes place at the
mesoscopic scale under standard molecular beam epitaxy condition
