ArXiv TLDR

Magnetic-flux tunable electronic transport through domain walls in a three-dimensional second-order topological insulator

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2604.21562

Zhe Hou, Ai-Min Guo

cond-mat.mes-hall

TLDR

This paper shows magnetic-flux tunable Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in electronic transport through domain walls in 3D second-order topological insulators.

Key contributions

  • Investigates electronic transport of 1D topological hinge states (THSs) through magnetic domain walls.
  • Discovers perfect sinusoidal Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in conductance, tunable by magnetic flux.
  • Explains oscillations via π-spin rotation of THSs using a scattering matrix approach.
  • Observes Fabry-Pérot oscillations in double-DW junctions, with flux-tunable minima.

Why it matters

This work introduces a novel method for controlling quantum transport of topological hinge states using magnetic flux. It offers a reliable experimental detection scheme for these exotic states, paving the way for advanced spintronic applications.

Original Abstract

The three-dimensional (3D) topological insulators (TIs), hosting topologically protected helical surface states, can be promoted into second-order TIs when a diagonal Zeeman term, typical of magnetic doping, is introduced. The latter hosts exotic chiral one-dimensional (1D) topological hinge states (THSs). In this paper, we investigate the electronic transport of THSs through a magnetic domain wall (DW) in a 3D TI nanowire. Due to the sign reversal of the out-of-plane magnetization across the DW, four 1D topological boundary states, residing on the edge of the DW, arise and form an enclosed loop mediating the counterpropagating THSs. By applying a uniform magnetic field parallel to the nanowire, we obtain a perfect sinusoidal Aharonov-Bohm oscillation in the two-terminal conductance $G$, formulated by $G=\frac{e^2}{2h} \left[ 1- \cos(πΦ/Φ_0) \right]$, with $Φ$ the magnetic flux through the DW and $Φ_0 = h/2e$ the flux quantum. Applying a phenomenological scattering matrix approach, we explain this novel Aharonov-Bohm oscillation perfectly, and attribute the constructive (destructive) interference of transmission at $Φ= Φ_0$ (0) to the $π$-spin rotation of the THSs traveling through the DW. Extending our study to a double-DW junction, where the central region has antiparallel magnetization to the leads, we observe Fabry-P{é}rot oscillations, in which the conductance minima are tuned by the magnetic flux. Our findings open a new avenue for finely controlling the quantum transport of THSs in magnetic systems using magnetic flux, and provide a faithful way for detecting THSs in experiments.

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