Observation of topologically protected states at crystalline phase boundaries in single-layer WSe2

Abstract: 

Transition metal dichalcogenide materials are unique in the wide variety of structural and electronic phases they exhibit in the two-dimensional limit. Here we show how such polymorphic flexibility can be used to achieve topological states at highly ordered phase boundaries in a new quantum spin Hall insulator (QSHI), 1T′-WSe2. We observe edge states at the crystallographically aligned interface between a quantum spin Hall insulating domain of 1T′-WSe2 and a semiconducting domain of 1H-WSe2 in contiguous single layers. The QSHI nature of single-layer 1T′-WSe2 is verified using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to determine band inversion around a 120 meV energy gap, as well as scanning tunneling spectroscopy to directly image edge-state formation. Using this edge-state geometry we confirm the predicted penetration depth of one-dimensional interface states into the two-dimensional bulk of a QSHI for a well-specified crystallographic direction. These interfaces create opportunities for testing predictions of the microscopic behavior of topologically protected boundary states.

Author: 
M. Ugeda
A. Pulkin
S. Tang
H. Ryu
Q. Wu
Y. Zhang
D. Wong
Z. Pedramrazi
A. Martín-Recio
Y. Chen
F. Wang
Z-X. Shen
S-K. Mo
O. V. Yazyev
M. F. Crommie
Publication date: 
August 24, 2018
Publication type: 
Journal Article