Spin-orbit insulating phase in SnTe cubic nanowires: consequences on the topological surface states
Ghulam Hussain, Kinga Warda, Giuseppe Cuono, Carmine Autieri

TL;DR
This study uses ab-initio calculations to explore how the thickness of SnTe cubic nanowires influences their electronic and topological phases, revealing a transition from trivial insulators to spin-orbit insulators and eventually to topological crystalline insulators.
Contribution
It demonstrates the thickness-dependent topological phase transitions in SnTe nanowires, highlighting the coexistence of trivial and topological surface states near the Fermi level.
Findings
Trivial insulator phase below 10 nm thickness.
Spin-orbit insulating phase between 10 nm and 17 nm.
Transition to topological crystalline insulator above 17 nm.
Abstract
We investigate the electronic, structural and topological properties of the SnTe and PbTe cubic nanowires using ab-initio calculations. Using standard and linear-scale density functional theory, we go from the ultrathin limit up to the nanowires thicknesses observed experimentally. Finite-size effects in the ultra-thin limit produce an electric quadrupole and associated structural distortions, these distortions increase the band gap but they get reduced with the size of the nanowires and become less and less relevant. Ultrathin SnTe cubic nanowires are trivial band gap insulators, we demonstrate that by increasing the thickness there is an electronic transition to a spin-orbit insulating phase due to trivial surface states in the regime of thin nanowires. These trivial surface states with a spin-orbit gap of a few meV appear at the same k-point of the topological surface states. Going…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Graphene research and applications · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides
