RESUMO
Epitaxial heterostructures with topological insulators enable novel quantum phases and practical device applications. Their topological electronic states are sensitive to the microscopic parameters, including structural inversion asymmetry (SIA), which is an inherent feature of many real heterostructures. Controlling SIA is challenging, because it requires the ability to tune the displacement field across the topological film. Here, using nanopatterned gates, we demonstrate a tunable displacement field in a heterostructure of the two-dimensional topological insulator cadmium arsenide. Transport studies in magnetic fields reveal an extreme sensitivity of the band inversion to SIA. We show that a relatively small displacement field (â¼50 mV/nm) converts the crossing of the two zeroth Landau levels in magnetic field to an avoided crossing, signaling a change to trivial band order. This work demonstrates a universal methodology for tuning electronic states in topological thin films.
RESUMO
Cadmium arsenide (Cd3As2) thin films feature a two-dimensional topological insulator (2D TI) phase for certain thicknesses, which theoretically hosts a set of counterpropagating helical edge states that are characteristic of a quantum spin Hall (QSH) insulator. In devices containing electrostatically defined junctions and for magnetic fields below a critical value, chiral edge modes of the quantum Hall effect can coexist with QSH-like edge modes. In this work, we use a quantum point contact (QPC) device to characterize edge modes in the 2D TI phase of Cd3As2 and to understand how they can be controllably transmitted, which is important for use in future quantum interference devices. We investigate equilibration among both types of modes and find non-spin-selective equilibration. We also demonstrate the effect of the magnetic field on suppressing equilibration. We discuss the potential role of QSH-like modes in a transmission pathway that precludes full pinch-off.