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Published February 25, 2020 | Submitted
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Engineering a robust quantum spin Hall state in graphene via adatom deposition

Abstract

The 2007 discovery of quantized conductance in HgTe quantum wells delivered the field of topological insulators (TIs) its first experimental confirmation. While many three-dimensional TIs have since been identified, HgTe remains the only known two-dimensional system in this class. Difficulty fabricating HgTe quantum wells has, moreover, hampered their widespread use. With the goal of breaking this logjam we provide a blueprint for stabilizing a robust TI state in a more readily available two-dimensional material---graphene. Using symmetry arguments, density functional theory, and tight-binding simulations, we predict that graphene endowed with certain heavy adatoms realizes a TI with substantial band gap. For indium and thallium, our most promising adatom candidates, a modest 6% coverage produces an estimated gap near 80K and 240K, respectively, which should be detectable in transport or spectroscopic measurements. Engineering such a robust topological phase in graphene could pave the way for a new generation of devices for spintronics, ultra-low-dissipation electronics and quantum information processing.

Additional Information

It is a pleasure to acknowledge helpful discussions with Jim Eisenstein, Ilya Elfimov, Josh Folk, Erik Henriksen, Roland Kawakami, Shu-Ping Lee, Gil Refael, Shan-Wen Tsai, and Amir Yacoby. J.A. gratefully acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation through grant DMR-1055522. Work at UBC was supported by NSERC and CIfAR.

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Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023