4.6 Article

Engineering the breaking of time-reversal symmetry in gate-tunable hybrid ferromagnet/topological insulator heterostructures

Journal

NPJ QUANTUM MATERIALS
Volume 3, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41535-018-0123-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DARPA
  2. C-SPIN, one of the six centers of STARnet, a Semiconductor Research Corporation program -MARCO
  3. ONR [N00014-18-1-2793, N00014-15-1-2370, N00014-15-1-2675]
  4. C-SPIN, one of the six centers of STARnet, a Semiconductor Research Corporation program - DARPA

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Studying the influence of broken time-reversal symmetry on topological materials is an important fundamental problem of current interest in condensed matter physics and its understanding could also provide a route toward proof-of-concept spintronic devices that exploit spin-textured topological states. Here we develop a new model quantum material for studying the effect of breaking time-reversal symmetry: a hybrid heterostructure wherein a ferromagnetic semiconductor Ga1-xMnxAs, with an out-of-plane component of magnetization, is cleanly interfaced with a topological insulator (Bi,Sb)(2)(Te,Se)(3) by molecular beam epitaxy. Lateral electrical transport in this bilayer is dominated by conduction through (Bi,Sb)(2)(Te,Se)(3) whose conductivity is a few orders of magnitude higher than that of highly resistive Ga1-xMnxAs. Electrical transport measurements in a top-gated heterostructure device reveal a crossover from weak antilocalization to weak localization as the temperature is lowered or as the chemical potential approaches the Dirac point. This is accompanied by a systematic emergence of an anomalous Hall effect. These results are interpreted in terms of the opening of a gap at the Dirac point due to exchange coupling between the topological insulator surface state and the ferromagnetic ordering in Ga1-xMnxAs. The experiments described here show that well-developed III-V ferromagnetic semiconductors could serve as valuable components of artificially designed quantum materials aimed at exploring the interplay between magnetism and topological phenomena.

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