4.8 Article

Crystal Field Effect Induced Topological Crystalline Insulators In Monolayer IV-VI Semiconductors

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 2657-2661

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00308

Keywords

Topological crystalline insulators; crystal field effect; IV-VI semiconductors; atomically thin materials

Funding

  1. STC Center for Integrated Quantum Materials, NSF [DMR-1231319]
  2. Texas AM University

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Two-dimensional (2D) topological crystalline insulators (TCIs) were recently predicted in thin films of the SnTe class of IV-VI semiconductors, which can host metallic edge states protected by mirror symmetry. As thickness decreases, quantum confinement effect will increase and surpass the inverted gap below a critical thickness, turning TCIs into normal insulators. Surprisingly, based on first-principles calculations, here we demonstrate that (001) monolayers of rocksalt IV-VI semiconductors XY (X = Ge, Sn, Pb and Y = S, Se, Te) are 2D TCIs with the fundamental band gap as large as 260 meV in monolayer PbTe. This unexpected nontrivial topological phase stems from the strong crystal field effect in the monolayer, which lifts the degeneracy between px,y and p(z) orbitals and leads to band inversion between cation p(z) and anion p(x),(y) orbitals. This crystal field effect induced topological phase offers a new strategy to find and design other atomically thin 2D topological materials.

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