4.8 Article

Unexpected mass acquisition of Dirac fermions at the quantum phase transition of a topological insulator

Journal

NATURE PHYSICS
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages 840-844

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NPHYS2058

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JSPS [19674002]
  2. JST-CREST
  3. MEXT of Japan
  4. AFOSR [AOARD 10-4103]
  5. KEK-PF [2009S2-005, 2010G507]
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [11J04376, 22103001, 19674002, 22103004] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The three-dimensional (3D) topological insulator is a novel quantum state of matter where an insulating bulk hosts a linearly dispersing surface state, which can be viewed as a sea of massless Dirac fermions protected by the time-reversal symmetry (TRS). Breaking the TRS by a magnetic order leads to the opening of a gap in the surface state(1), and consequently the Dirac fermions become massive. It has been proposed theoretically that such a mass acquisition is necessary to realize novel topological phenomena(2,3), but achieving a sufficiently large mass is an experimental challenge. Here we report an unexpected discovery that the surface Dirac fermions in a solid-solution system TlBi(S1-xSex)(2) acquire a mass without explicitly breaking the TRS. We found that this system goes through a quantum phase transition from the topological to the non-topological phase, and, by tracing the evolution of the electronic states using the angle-resolved photoemission, we observed that the massless Dirac state in TlBiSe2 switches to a massive state before it disappears in the non-topological phase. This result suggests the existence of a condensed-matter version of the 'Higgs mechanism' where particles acquire a mass through spontaneous symmetry breaking.

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