Seminar: Fantastic topological materials and where to find them: from computational discovery to materials design

June 29th 2021 at 16:30 Room A, building F (Also on Zoom) - Dr. Antimo Marrazzo (Physics Department, University of Trieste)
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06/29/2021 - 16:30
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06/14/2021
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Trieste

Tuesday June 29th 2021 at 16:30
Room A, building F
Physics Department UniTS (Piazzale Europa, Via Valerio 2)
Also on Zoom at https://tinyurl.com/toposeminar (Password: topology)

Fantastic topological materials and where to find them: from computational discovery to materials design
Dr. Antimo Marrazzo (Physics Department, University of Trieste)

Abstract

In 1988 Haldane (Nobel Prize in Physics 2016) introduced the first model for a topological insulator—the Chern insulator—by considering graphene in the presence of a staggered magnetic field. In 2005 Kane and Mele realised that by doubling Haldane’s model and introducing spins, they could get rid of magnetic fields and obtain a quantum spin Hall insulator (QSHI), i.e. a time-reversal invariant insulator characterised by Z2 topological order and helical edge states. Since then there has been a significant effort in the study of topological order in real materials.

I will start by introducing our computational screening for novel QSHIs, estimating the relative abundance of these materials in nature. Then, I will present my prediction of monolayer jacutingaite (Pt2HgSe3, a naturally-occurring mineral) as the first large-gap Kane-Mele (KM) QSHI. I will discuss the rich physics of monolayer jacutingaite, from its close relationship with graphene to the interplay between spin-orbit coupling, crystal-symmetry breaking, and dielectric response.

Then I will move to bulk jacutingaite, that we discovered to be a dual topological insulator with topologically-protected 001-surface states, as confirmed by ARPES experiments. I will discuss our extension of the KM model to 3D, providing an appealing conceptual framework also relevant for other layered materials made of stacked honeycomb lattices. Finally, I will present some current efforts on designing van-der-Waals ferroelectric topological insulators.

The colloquium will last 45 minutes, followed by 15 minutes of discussion.

Looking forward to seeing you there!

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Dr. Antimo Marrazzo

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Dr. Antimo Marrazzo
Last update: 06-14-2021 - 17:34
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