Top-down patterning of topological surface and edge states using a focused ion beam

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Abstract

The conducting boundary states of topological insulators appear at an interface where the characteristic invariant ℤ2 switches from 1 to 0. These states offer prospects for quantum electronics; however, a method is needed to spatially-control ℤ2 to pattern conducting channels. It is shown that modifying Sb2Te3 single-crystal surfaces with an ion beam switches the topological insulator into an amorphous state exhibiting negligible bulk and surface conductivity. This is attributed to a transition from ℤ2= 1 → ℤ2= 0 at a threshold disorder strength. This observation is supported by density functional theory and model Hamiltonian calculations. Here we show that this ion-beam treatment allows for inverse lithography to pattern arrays of topological surfaces, edges and corners which are the building blocks of topological electronics.

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Bake, A., Zhang, Q., Ho, C. S., Causer, G. L., Zhao, W., Yue, Z., … Cortie, D. (2023). Top-down patterning of topological surface and edge states using a focused ion beam. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37102-x

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