Site Mixing for Engineering Magnetic Topological Insulators
Yaohua Liu, Lin-Lin Wang, Qiang Zheng, Zengle Huang, Xiaoping Wang,, Miaofang Chi, Yan Wu, Bryan C. Chakoumakos, Michael A. McGuire, Brian C., Sales, Weida Wu, Jiaqiang Yan

TL;DR
This study investigates how antisite defects affect the magnetic and electronic properties of MnSb$_2$Te$_4$, providing insights into defect control for engineering magnetic topological insulators.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes the impact of Mn-Sb site mixing on magnetism and topology in MnSb$_2$Te$_4$, revealing defect-induced magnetic and electronic modifications.
Findings
Mn-Sb antisite defects lead to complex magnetic structures.
Site mixing favors ferromagnetic interlayer coupling.
Defects impair the band inversion necessary for nontrivial topology.
Abstract
The van der Waals compound, MnBiTe, is the first intrinsic magnetic topological insulator, providing a materials platform for exploring exotic quantum phenomena such as the axion insulator state and the quantum anomalous Hall effect. However, intrinsic structural imperfections lead to bulk conductivity, and the roles of magnetic defects are still unknown. With higher concentrations of same types of magnetic defects, the isostructural compound MnSbTe is a better model system for a systematic investigation of the connections among magnetic, topology and lattice defects. In this work, the impact of antisite defects on the magnetism and electronic structure is studied in MnSbTe. Mn-Sb site mixing leads to complex magnetic structures and tunes the interlayer magnetic coupling between antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic. The detailed nonstoichiometry and site-mixing of…
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