Topological Surface States Protected From Backscattering by Chiral Spin Texture
Pedram Roushan, Jungpil Seo, Colin V. Parker, Y. S. Hor, D. Hsieh,, Dong Qian, Anthony Richardella, M. Z. Hasan, R. J. Cava, Ali Yazdani

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that topological surface states in BiSb are protected from backscattering by their chiral spin texture, which preserves spin coherence and has implications for spintronics and quantum computing.
Contribution
It provides direct experimental evidence that disorder does not induce backscattering in topological surface states due to their chiral spin texture.
Findings
Backscattering between states of opposite momentum and spin is absent.
Chiral spin texture protects surface states from disorder-induced backscattering.
Potential for coherent spin transport in spintronic devices.
Abstract
Topological insulators are a new class of insulators in which a bulk gap for electronic excitations is generated by strong spin orbit coupling. These novel materials are distinguished from ordinary insulators by the presence of gapless metallic boundary states, akin to the chiral edge modes in quantum Hall systems, but with unconventional spin textures. Recently, experiments and theoretical efforts have provided strong evidence for both two- and three-dimensional topological insulators and their novel edge and surface states in semiconductor quantum well structures and several Bi-based compounds. A key characteristic of these spin-textured boundary states is their insensitivity to spin-independent scattering, which protects them from backscattering and localization. These chiral states are potentially useful for spin-based electronics, in which long spin coherence is critical, and also…
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