Observation of topological order in a Superconducting doped topological insulator (based on the Bi2Se3 class)
L. Andrew Wray, Suyang Xu, Yuqi Xia, Dong Qian, Alexei V. Fedorov,, Hsin Lin, Arun Bansil, Yew San Hor, Robert J. Cava, M. Zahid Hasan

TL;DR
This paper reports the observation of topological order in a superconducting doped topological insulator, Bi2Se3, revealing the interplay between topological surface states and superconductivity, with implications for quantum information science.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of topological surface states coexisting with superconductivity in Cu-doped Bi2Se3, advancing understanding of topological-superconductivity in 3D topological insulators.
Findings
Superconductivity occurs with electrons in a relativistic regime.
Topological surface character is preserved at the Fermi level in doped samples.
Unconventional doping mechanism maintains topological surface states in superconducting phase.
Abstract
Topological insulators embody a new state of matter characterized entirely by the topological invariants of the bulk electronic structure rather than any form of spontaneously broken symmetry. Unlike the 2D quantum Hall or quantum spin-Hall-like systems, the three dimensional (3D) topological insulators can host magnetism and superconductivity which has generated widespread research activity in condensed-matter and materials-physics communities. Thus there is an explosion of interest in understanding the rich interplay between topological and the broken-symmetry states (such as superconductivity), greatly spurred by proposals that superconductivity introduced into certain band structures will host exotic quasiparticles which are of interest in quantum information science. The observations of superconductivity in doped Bi_2Se_3 (CuBiSe) and doped Bi_2Te_3 (Pd-BiTe…
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