| Literature DB >> 27563979 |
Georg W Winkler1, QuanSheng Wu1, Matthias Troyer1, Peter Krogstrup2, Alexey A Soluyanov1,3.
Abstract
Superconductor proximitized one-dimensional semiconductor nanowires with strong spin-orbit interaction (SOI) are, at this time, the most promising candidates for the realization of topological quantum information processing. In current experiments the SOI originates predominantly from extrinsic fields, induced by finite size effects and applied gate voltages. The dependence of the topological transition in these devices on microscopic details makes scaling to a large number of devices difficult unless a material with dominant intrinsic bulk SOI is used. Here, we show that wires made of certain ordered alloys InAs_{1-x}Sb_{x} have spin splittings up to 20 times larger than those reached in pristine InSb wires. In particular, we show this for a stable ordered CuPt structure at x=0.5, which has an inverted band ordering and realizes a novel type of a topological semimetal with triple degeneracy points in the bulk spectrum that produce topological surface Fermi arcs. Experimentally achievable strains can either drive this compound into a topological insulator phase or restore the normal band ordering, making the CuPt-ordered InAs_{0.5}Sb_{0.5} a semiconductor with a large intrinsic linear in k bulk spin splitting.Year: 2016 PMID: 27563979 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.076403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161