Tunable symmetry breaking and helical edge transport in a graphene quantum spin Hall state
A. F. Young, J. D. Sanchez-Yamagishi, B. Hunt, S. H. Choi, K., Watanabe, T. Taniguchi, R. C. Ashoori, P. Jarillo-Herrero

TL;DR
This paper reports the experimental discovery of a tunable quantum spin Hall effect in graphene under a large tilted magnetic field, revealing helical edge states protected by spin-rotation symmetry and modulated by magnetic interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates a new type of QSH effect in graphene, protected by spin-rotation symmetry, and shows how its properties can be tuned via magnetic field and antiferromagnetic interactions.
Findings
Observation of helical edge states in graphene under high magnetic field
Tunable band gap and spin texture in edge states
Transition between different magnetic states affecting edge transport
Abstract
Low-dimensional electronic systems have traditionally been obtained by electrostatically confining electrons, either in heterostructures or in intrinsically nanoscale materials such as single molecules, nanowires, and graphene. Recently, a new paradigm has emerged with the advent of symmetry-protected surface states on the boundary of topological insulators, enabling the creation of electronic systems with novel properties. For example, time reversal symmetry (TRS) endows the massless charge carriers on the surface of a three-dimensional topological insulator with helicity, locking the orientation of their spin relative to their momentum. Weakly breaking this symmetry generates a gap on the surface, resulting in charge carriers with finite effective mass and exotic spin textures. Analogous manipulations of the one-dimensional boundary states of a two-dimensional topological insulator…
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