Helical Metal Inside a Topological Band Insulator
Abstract
Topological defects, such as domain walls and vortices, have long fascinated physicists. A novel twist is added in quantum systems like the B-phase of superfluid helium He, where vortices are associated with low energy excitations in the cores. Similarly, cosmic strings may be tied to propagating fermion modes. Can analogous phenomena occur in crystalline solids that host a plethora of topological defects? Here we show that indeed dislocation lines are associated with one dimensional fermionic excitations in a `topological insulator', a novel band insulator believed to be realized in the bulk material BiSb. In contrast to fermionic excitations in a regular quantum wire, these modes are topologically protected like the helical edge states of the quantum spin-Hall insulator, and not scattered by disorder. Since dislocations are ubiquitous in real materials, these excitations could dominate spin and charge transport in topological insulators. Our results provide a novel route to creating a potentially ideal quantum wire in a bulk solid.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0810.5121,
title = {Helical Metal Inside a Topological Band Insulator},
author = {Ying Ran and Yi Zhang and Ashvin Vishwanath},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.5121},
year = {2009}
}