RESUMEN
Step edges of topological crystalline insulators can be viewed as predecessors of higher-order topology, as they embody one-dimensional edge channels embedded in an effective three-dimensional electronic vacuum emanating from the topological crystalline insulator. Using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, we investigate the behavior of such edge channels in Pb1-xSnxSe under doping. Once the energy position of the step edge is brought close to the Fermi level, we observe the opening of a correlation gap. The experimental results are rationalized in terms of interaction effects which are enhanced since the electronic density is collapsed to a one-dimensional channel. This constitutes a unique system to study how topology and many-body electronic effects intertwine, which we model theoretically through a Hartree-Fock analysis.
RESUMEN
The nanohardness and Young's modulus of Pb1-xCdxTe single crystals prepared by the self-selecting vapor growth (SSVG) method and thick, MBE-grown layers with a total Cd content of up to 7% metal atoms were studied using the nanoindentation technique; the nanohardness and Young's modulus were calculated by the Oliver and Pharr method. Significant hardening of SSVG crystals with increasing number of Cd atoms replacing Pb atoms in the formed solid solution was observed, and low anisotropy of the nanohardness and Young's modulus were found. The CdTe solubility limit in the solid solution grown using an MBE equal to 2.1% was demonstrated; even for the significantly higher total Cd concentration in the layer, the possible presence of precipitates was not detected. Significant differences were found for both the energy of elastic crystal deformation and Young's modulus determined for samples grown using the two methods. An increase in nanohardness with an increase in the number of Cd atoms outside the cation sublattice was shown. The different ratios of hardening mechanisms acting simultaneously in the analyzed crystals in various ranges of Cd concentrations were demonstrated and discussed. The observed effects were attributed to the much higher concentration of point defects in MBE-grown layers than in SSVG crystals, in particular, the interstitial Cd-Te vacancy complexes effectively hampering nucleation and propagation of dislocations in the former case.