ABSTRACT
Quantum spin Hall (QSH) systems hold promises of low-power-consuming spintronic devices, yet their practical applications are extremely impeded by the small energy gaps. Fabricating QSH materials with large gaps, especially under the guidance of design principles, is essential for both scientific research and practical applications. Here, we demonstrate that large on-site atomic spin-orbit coupling can be directly exploited via the intriguing substrate-orbital-filtering effect to generate large-gap QSH systems and experimentally realized on the epitaxially synthesized ultraflat bismuthene on Ag(111). Theoretical calculations reveal that the underlying substrate selectively filters Bi pz orbitals away from the Fermi level, leading pxy orbitals with nonzero magnetic quantum numbers, resulting in large topological gap of â¼1 eV at the K point. The corresponding topological edge states are identified through scanning tunneling spectroscopy combined with density functional theory calculations. Our findings provide general strategies to design large-gap QSH systems and further explore their topology-related physics.
ABSTRACT
Although Pb harbors a strong spin-orbit coupling effect, pristine plumbene (the last group-IV cousin of graphene) hosts topologically trivial states. Based on first-principles calculations, we demonstrate that epitaxial growth of plumbene on the BaTe(111) surface converts the trivial Pb lattice into a quantum spin Hall (QSH) phase with a large gap of â¼0.3 eV via a selective substrate-orbital-filtering effect. Tight-binding model analyses show the pz orbital in half of the Pb overlayer is selectively removed by the BaTe substrate, leaving behind a pz-px,y band inversion. Based on the same working principle, the gap can be further increased to â¼0.5-0.6 eV by surface adsorption of H or halogen atoms that filters out the other half of the Pb pz orbitals. The mechanism of selective substrate-orbital-filtering is general, opening an avenue to explore large-gap QSH insulators in heavy-metal-based materials. It is worth noting that plumbene has already been widely grown on various substrates experimentally.