Observation of Anomalous Hall Effect in Bulk Single Crystals of n-type Cr-doped Sb$_{2}$Te$_{3}$ Magnetic Topological Insulator
Ali Sarikhani (1), Mathew Pollard (2), Jacob Cook (3), Sheng Qiu (2), Seng Huat Lee (2), Laleh Avazpour (2), Jack Crewse (2), William Fahrenholtz (4), Guang Bian (3), Yew San Hor (2) ((1) Material Research Center, Missouri University of Science, Technology, Rolla, MO

TL;DR
This paper reports the observation of the anomalous Hall effect in Cr-doped Sb₂Te₃, an n-type magnetic topological insulator, demonstrating ferromagnetism and potential for quantum anomalous Hall applications.
Contribution
It introduces Cr doping in Sb₂Te₃ to achieve n-type behavior and observes the anomalous Hall effect, advancing the development of magnetic topological insulators.
Findings
Cr doping induces n-type conductivity in Sb₂Te₃
Cr-doped Sb₂Te₃ exhibits ferromagnetism with T_C ~170 K
Anomalous Hall effect observed in the doped material
Abstract
The exploration of topological Dirac surface states is significant in the realms of condensed matter physics and future technological innovations. Among the materials garnering attention is SbTe, a compound that theoretically exhibits topological insulating properties. However, its inherent p-type nature prevents the direct experimental verification of its Dirac surface state due to the Fermi level alignment with the valence band. In this study, by doping Cr atoms into SbTe, n-type behavior is observed in the Hall resistance measurements. Remarkably, the Cr-doped SbTe not only shows ferromagnetism with a high transition temperature of approximately 170 K but also exhibits an anomalous Hall effect (AHE). The Cr doping also allows for a controlled method for Fermi level tuning into the band gap. These properties spotlight its potential as an n-type…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
