Topological Insulators
M. Z. Hasan, C. L. Kane

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical foundations, experimental observations, and potential applications of topological insulators, highlighting their unique surface states, exotic quantum phenomena, and prospects for quantum computing.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of topological insulators, including recent experimental evidence and discussion of exotic states like Majorana fermions and quantum Hall effects.
Findings
Observation of edge states in HgCdTe quantum wells
Establishment of Bi2Se3 and related materials as 3D topological insulators
Discussion of exotic surface states and their potential for quantum computing
Abstract
Topological insulators are electronic materials that have a bulk band gap like an ordinary insulator, but have protected conducting states on their edge or surface. The 2D topological insulator is a quantum spin Hall insulator, which is a close cousin of the integer quantum Hall state. A 3D topological insulator supports novel spin polarized 2D Dirac fermions on its surface. In this Colloquium article we will review the theoretical foundation for these electronic states and describe recent experiments in which their signatures have been observed. We will describe transport experiments on HgCdTe quantum wells that demonstrate the existence of the edge states predicted for the quantum spin Hall insulator. We will then discuss experiments on Bi_{1-x}Sb_x, Bi_2 Se_3, Bi_2 Te_3 and Sb_2 Te_3 that establish these materials as 3D topological insulators and directly probe the topology of their…
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