Proximity-induced zero-energy states indistinguishable from topological edge states
Igor J. Califrer, Poliana H. Penteado, J. Carlos Egues, Wei Chen

TL;DR
This paper investigates how zero-energy states in topological materials can be mimicked by trivial states induced by metallic layers, complicating the identification of true topological edge states.
Contribution
It demonstrates that trivial zero-energy states can appear in topological systems due to proximity effects, even in trivial phases, highlighting challenges in distinguishing genuine topological states.
Findings
Trivial zero-energy states can percolate into topological regions.
Fine-tuned NM states can mimic topological edge states.
Majorana modes are robust against NM-induced crossings.
Abstract
When normal metals (NMs) are attached to topological insulators or topological superconductors, it is conceivable that the quantum states in these finite adjacent materials can intermix. In this case -- and because the NM usually does not possess the same symmetry as the topological material -- it is pertinent to ask whether zero-energy edge states in the topological layer are affected by the presence of the NM. To address this issue, we consider three prototype systems simulated by tight-binding models, namely a Su-Schrieffer-Heeger/NM, a Kitaev/NM, and a Chern insulator/NM. For all junctions investigated, we find that there exist trivial ``fine-tuned'' zero-energy states in the NM layer that can percolate into the topological region, thus mimicking a topological state. These zero-energy states are created by fine-tuning the NM chemical potential such that some of the NM states cross…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Topological Materials and Phenomena
