Effect of Sn Doping on Surface States of Bi<sub>2</sub>Se<sub>3</sub> Thin Films
ORAL
Abstract
Bi2Se3, widely studied as a topological insulator, has great potential for applications in low power electronics and quantum computing. Intrinsic doping, however, presents a persistent challenge, leading to predominantly bulk conduction. In this work, we use substitutional Sn dopants to control the Fermi level in MBE-grown Bi2Se3 films. Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) shows a shift in the local density of states towards the Dirac point as more Sn is incorporated, with density functional theory calculations corroborating the STM results, showing that Sn adds metallic states near the Fermi level that are localized to the defect sites while leaving the Dirac cone undisturbed. Electronic transport measurements show increasing weak antilocalization with doping level, demonstrating that the Sn defects increase the separation between bulk and surface states, though bulk conduction remains a dominant component. However, the macroscopic behavior is still dominated by bulk conduction due to the localized Sn states within the bulk. Overall, we find that Sn doping is a promising method for enhancing the contribution of surface states in Bi2Se3.
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Presenters
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Gregory Stephen
Laboratory for Physical Sciences
Authors
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Gregory Stephen
Laboratory for Physical Sciences
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Ivan Naumov
Howard University, Physics and Astronomy, Howard University
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Siddharth Tyagi
Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Maryland
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Owen Vail
Army Research Lab
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Jennifer DeMell
Laboratory for Physical Sciences
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Michael Dreyer
University of Maryland, College Park, University of Maryland, Physics, University of Maryland, Department of Physics, University of Maryland
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Robert E Butera
Laboratory for Physical Sciences
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Aubrey T. Hanbicki
Laboratory for Physical Sciences
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Patrick Taylor
Army Research Lab
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Isaak Mayergoyz
Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Maryland
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Pratibha Dev
Howard University, Physics, Howard University, Physics and Astronomy, Howard University
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Adam L Friedman
Laboratory for Physical Sciences