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Confinement-induced chiral edge channel interaction in quantum anomalous Hall insulators

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) insulators are well-known for their insulating bulk and non-dissipative chiral edge states, but the penetration depth of the chiral edge states and how they interact with the bulk state have not been fully understood. Some previous studies suggested that the edge states decay exponentially into the bulk with a penetration depth of a few nm, while the others argued that this length is much longer (~ 102 nm). A recent experiment found that at the charge neutral point, the QAH effect persists in narrow devices with widths down to ~72 nm, and the Hall resistance slowly deviates from the quantized value as the width is reduced. To understand these observations, here we theoretically investigate the chiral edge states in a QAH system. We show that the chiral edge states exhibit a short, intrinsic penetration depth of a few nm, featuring the exponential decay. We also demonstrate that disorders can extend the chiral edge states into the bulk, which further facilitates the interaction between two edge states, and thus leads to slight deviations from the perfect QAH.

Publication: arXiv:2207.08371 (preprint)

Presenters

  • Ruobing Mei

    Pennsylvania State University

Authors

  • Ruobing Mei

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Lingjie Zhou

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Yi-Fan Zhao

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Ruoxi Zhang

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Zijie Yan

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Deyi Zhou

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University

  • Wei Yuan

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Morteza Kayyalha

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Moses H Chan

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Cui-Zu Chang

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University

  • Chaoxing Liu

    Pennsylvania State University, Department of Physics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA, Department of Physics, The Pennsylvania State University