Precision in Two Dimensions: Analysis of Topological Quantum Materials
ORAL
Abstract
New Topological Insulators (TI) quantum materials with fascinating properties promises to transform device design particularly with the ability to make stacked pseudo two-dimensional heterointerfaces. Some of the quantum phenomena displayed by these materials now persists at room temperature, Ba6Nb11S28 naturally realizes vdW coupled heterointerfaces between transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) monolayers (hexagonal NbS2, H-NbS2) and insulating spacers Ba3NbS5. Low Energy Electron Diffraction (LEED) taken along the c-axis shows that the hexagonal spacer and TMD layers, are commensurate. The electronic band structure can be understood as that resulting from superimposing a periodic potential defined by Ba3NbS5 onto monolayer H-NbS2. This mechanism which yields flat energy bands and correlated physics in twisted-bilayer graphene and TMD heterostructures and is one of the key advances in the corelation of band structure and properties. We have shown with STEM, L/PEEM methods that new approaches are needed to identify the sub-structures of complex material. LEEM is a low- energy electron probe method that allows fine surface probing down to several layers. We show that new approaches to probing methods can show that behaviour is a consequence of the underlying symmetry properties of the multi-layer system.
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Publication: Devarakonda, A., Chen, A., Fang, S. et al. Evidence of striped electronic phases in a structurally modulated superlattice. Nature 631, 526–530 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07589-5
Presenters
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David C Bell
Harvard University
Authors
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David C Bell
Harvard University
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Avi Auslender
Harvard University
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Austin Akey
Harvard University
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Shu Yang Frank Zhao
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Jules A Gardener
Harvard University
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Aravind Devarakonda
Columbia University
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Joseph G Checkelsky
Massachusetts Institute of Technology