The spin-orbit interaction affects the electronic structure of solids in various ways. Topological insulators are one example in which the spin-orbit interaction leads the bulk bands to have a non-trivial topology, observable as gapless surface or edge states. Another example is the Rashba effect, which lifts the electron-spin degeneracy as a consequence of the spin-orbit interaction under broken inversion symmetry. It is of particular importance to know how these two effects, that is, the non-trivial topology of electronic states and the Rashba spin splitting, interplay with each other. Here we show through sophisticated first-principles calculations that BiTeI, a giant bulk Rashba semiconductor, turns into a topological insulator under a reasonable pressure. This material is shown to exhibit several unique features, such as a highly pressure-tunable giant Rashba spin splitting, an unusual pressure-induced quantum phase transition, and more importantly, the formation of strikingly different Dirac surface states at opposite sides of the material. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Bahramy, M. S., Yang, B. J., Arita, R., & Nagaosa, N. (2012). Emergence of non-centrosymmetric topological insulating phase in BiTeI under pressure. Nature Communications, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1679
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