In-Plane Orbital Texture Switch at the Dirac Point in the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3
Yue Cao, J. A. Waugh, X.-W. Zhang, J.-W. Luo, Q. Wang, T. J. Reber, S., K. Mo, Z. Xu, A. Yang, J. Schneeloch, G. Gu, M. Brahlek, N. Bansal, S. Oh, A., Zunger, Daniel S. Dessau

TL;DR
This study reveals an in-plane orbital texture switch at the Dirac point in Bi2Se3 topological insulators, highlighting an intrinsic aspect of the topological Dirac state that influences spin texture complexity.
Contribution
First combined experimental and theoretical demonstration of the in-plane orbital texture switch at the Dirac point in Bi2Se3, challenging existing models.
Findings
Orbital wavefunctions switch from tangential to radial at the Dirac point.
The orbital texture switch is intrinsic to topological physics.
Results suggest a more complex spin texture than previously thought.
Abstract
Topological insulators are novel macroscopic quantum-mechanical phase of matter, which hold promise for realizing some of the most exotic particles in physics as well as application towards spintronics and quantum computation. In all the known topological insulators, strong spin-orbit coupling is critical for the generation of the protected massless surface states. Consequently, a complete description of the Dirac state should include both the spin and orbital (spatial) parts of the wavefunction. For the family of materials with a single Dirac cone, theories and experiments agree qualitatively, showing the topological state has a chiral spin texture that changes handedness across the Dirac point (DP), but they differ quantitatively on how the spin is polarized. Limited existing theoretical ideas predict chiral local orbital angular momentum on the two sides of the DP. However, there…
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