Large Gap Quantum Anomalous Hall Effect in a Type-I Heterostructure Between a Magnetically Doped Topological Insulator and Antiferromagnetic Insulator
Anh Pham, Ling-Jie Zhou, Yi-Fan Zhao, Cui-Zu Chang, Timothy Charlton,, P. Ganesh

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a type-I heterostructure between a magnetic insulator and a topological insulator can exhibit a large-gap quantum anomalous Hall effect, confirmed by theoretical calculations and neutron reflectometry.
Contribution
It introduces a novel heterostructure design with a large gap and robust QAHE, combining density functional theory, band modeling, and experimental validation.
Findings
Cr doping increases the gap to ~64.5 meV
Heterostructure acts as a Chern insulator with C = -1
Chiral edge modes dominate current transport
Abstract
Heterostructures between topological insulators (TI) and magnetic insulators represent a pathway to realize the quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE). Using density functional theory based systematic screening and investigation of thermodynamic, magnetic and topological properties of heterostructures, we demonstrate that forming a type-I heterostructure between a wide gap antiferromagnetic insulator CrO and a TI-film, such as SbTe, can lead to pinning of the Fermi-level at the center of the gap, even when magnetically doped. Cr-doping in the heterostructure increases the gap to 64.5 meV, with a large Zeeman energy from the interfacial Cr dopants, thus overcoming potential metallicity due to band bending effects. By fitting the band-structure around the Fermi-level to a 4-band k.p model Hamiltonian, we show that Cr doped SbTe/CrO is a Chern insulator…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Magnetic Field Sensors Techniques · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
