Magnetic field induced helical mode and topological transitions in a quasi-ballistic topological insulator nanoribbon with circumferentially quantized surface state sub-bands
Luis A. Jauregui, Michael T. Pettes, Leonid P. Rokhinson, Li Shi, Yong, P. Chen

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the experimental observation of magnetic field-induced topological transitions and helical modes in a quasi-ballistic Bi2Te3 topological insulator nanoribbon, revealing periodic conductance oscillations linked to circumferentially quantized surface states.
Contribution
First experimental verification of magnetic flux-driven topological transitions and helical modes in a topological insulator nanoribbon with circumferential surface state quantization.
Findings
Observation of k_F-periodic alternations between 0-ABO and π-ABO.
Quasi-ballistic transport over approximately 2 μm length.
Extraction of the minimal Fermi energy and momentum for TSS emergence.
Abstract
A topological insulator (TI) nanowire (NW), where the core is insulating and the 2D spin-helical Dirac fermion topological surface states (TSS) are circumferentially quantized into a series of 1D sub-bands, promises novel topological physics and applications. An axial magnetic flux ({\Phi}) through the core drives periodic topological transitions in the surface sub-bands, changing from being all doubly-degenerate with a gapped Dirac point (DP) at integer (including zero) flux quanta ({\Phi} = h/e, with h being the Planck constant and e the electron charge), to contain a topologically-protected, non-degenerate 1D spin helical mode with restored DP at half-integer flux quanta. The resulting magnetoconductance is predicted to exhibit Aharonov-Bohm oscillations (ABO) with maxima occurring alternatively at half-integer or integer flux quanta (referred to as {\pi}-ABO or 0-ABO), depending…
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