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Topological magnetoelectric effect (TME) and quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) of topological-insulator (TI) thin films

ORAL

Abstract

We present a theoretical study of the two-dimensional (2D) surface states and orbital magnetoelectric response of TI thin films in which time-reversal symmetry is broken by magnetism at the surface. In the limit of large thickness d and small exchange coupling, the magnetization can be decomposed into independent contributions from top (t) and bottom (b) surfaces, with the single-surface magnetization Ms=t,b(Js, EDs) being a function of its exchange coupling Js and the Dirac point energy EDs relative to chemical potential. In the QAHE phase, appearing for Jt Jb > 0, |∂Ms/∂EDs| equals e/2h in the small-J large-d limit when the chemical potential lies in the surface state gap. Since Ms(Js, EDs) = - Ms(-Js, EDs) by time-reversal symmetry, it follows that when Jt Jb < 0 (the axion insulator phase) the 3D magnetization M3D = (Mt + Mb)/d response to a vertical electric field E is ∂M3D/∂E = e2/2h, a relationship referred to as the TME. By combining an effective model of the Dirac-cone surface states with tight-binding model calculations, we conclude that the TME is in fact robust against Js and remains quantized even at exchange strengths for which a half-quantized surface anomalous Hall conductance cannot be properly defined. We comment on how the TME can be realized experimentally.

Presenters

  • Nezhat Pournaghavi

    Department of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Linnaeus Univ

Authors

  • Nezhat Pournaghavi

    Department of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Linnaeus Univ

  • Anna Pertsova

    Nordita, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Stockholm University

  • Carlo Canali

    Department of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Linnaeus Univ

  • Allan MacDonald

    Physics, University of Texas at Austin, Physics Department, University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas at Austin, Department of physics, University of Texas at Austin, Department of Physics, University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas, Austin