Contrast Reversal in Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Its Implications for the Topological Classification of SmB6

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Abstract

SmB6 has recently attracted considerable interest as a candidate for the first strongly correlated topological insulator. Such materials promise entirely new properties such as correlation-enhanced bulk bandgaps or a Fermi surface from spin excitations. Whether SmB6 and its surface states are topological or trivial is still heavily disputed however, and a solution is hindered by major disagreement between angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) results. Here, a combined ARPES and STM experiment is conducted. It is discovered that the STM contrast strongly depends on the bias voltage and reverses its sign beyond 1 V. It is shown that the understanding of this contrast reversal is the clue to resolving the discrepancy between ARPES and STM results. In particular, the scanning tunneling spectra reflect a low-energy electronic structure at the surface, which supports a trivial origin of the surface states and the surface metallicity of SmB6.

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Herrmann, H., Hlawenka, P., Siemensmeyer, K., Weschke, E., Sánchez-Barriga, J., Varykhalov, A., … Rienks, E. D. L. (2020). Contrast Reversal in Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Its Implications for the Topological Classification of SmB6. Advanced Materials, 32(10). https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201906725

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