Title: A new experimental approach for the exploration of topological quantum phenomena : Topological Insulators and Superconductors
Abstract: The three-dimensional insulator (originally called topological insulators) is the first example in nature of a topologically ordered electronic phase existing in three dimensions that cannot be reduced to multiple copies of quantum-Hall-like states. Their order can be realized at room temperatures without magnetic fields and they can be turned into magnets and exotic superconductors leading to world-wide interest and activity in insulators. One of the major challenges in going from quantum Hall-like 2D states to 3D insulators is to develop new experimental approaches/methods to precisely probe this novel form of topological-order since the standard tools and settings that work for IQH-state also work for QSH states. The method to probe 2D topological-order is exclusively with charge transport, which either measures quantized transverse conductance plateaus in IQH systems or longitudinal conductance in quantum spin Hall (QSH) systems. In a 3D insulator, the boundary itself supports a two dimensional electron gas (2DEG) and transport is not (Z$_2$) topologically quantized. In this paper, we review the birth of momentum- and spin-resolved spectroscopy as a new experimental approach and as a directly boundary sensitive method to study and prove topological-order in three-dimensions via the direct measurements of the invariants {$\nu_o$} that are associated with the Z$_2$ topology of the spin-orbit band structure and opposite parity band inversions, which led to the experimental discovery of the first 3D insulators. We also discuss how spectroscopic methods are leading to the identification of spin-orbit superconductors that may work as Majorana platforms and can be used to identify superconductors - yet another class of new state of matter.
Publication Year: 2011
Publication Date: 2011-05-02
Language: en
Type: preprint
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Cited By Count: 3
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