Periodic Reporting for period 1 - TNFL-TMML (Topological New Fermions under Laser and New Topological Material Exploring via Machine Learning)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2018-04-01 do 2020-03-31
In the first and second topics, we aim to bring together 2 exciting fields of frontier condensed matter researches and material science: i) the studies of topological materials and ii) the novel control opportunities offered by strong lasers. In the last decade, tremendous progresses have been made in these fields both from theoretical and experimental points of views. The great success in this field further inspires new studies to understand the underlying physics and potential applications to use these exotic effects for electronic and spintronic device design. On the other hand, fast development of laser technology provides the possibility to control, modify, and steer the electronic properties of solid states precisely on ultra-fast (femto to pico-second) time scales in a reversible and flexible manner way beyond the possibilities in equilibrium. These properties of control are highly beneficial to many of the emerging quantum technologies. However, in this rich field theoretical approaches to describe the light matter interaction in topological systems and efficiently engineering the topological properties are urgently needed, which we will provide within our research endeavor.
We systematically studied the electronic properties of Bi(111) thin films grown on a NbSe2 substrate. Combined with STM and the first-principles calculations, we found two types of non-magnetic edge structures coexist alternately at the boundaries of singe-bilayer islands, whose topological edge states exhibit remarkably different energy and spatial distributions. Prominent edge states are persistently visualized at the edges of both single and double bilayer Bi islands, regardless of the underlying thickness of Bi(111) thin films. Our work clarified the long-standing controversy regarding the topology of Bi(111) thin films and reveals the tunability of topological edge states via edge modifications. We also found that the dual-gate technology can well tune the electronic and topological properties of AFM even septuple-layer (SL) MnBi2Te4 thin films. Under an out-of-plane electric field, the Berry curvature of thin film could be engineered efficiently, resulting in a huge change of anomalous Hall signal. Beyond the critical electric field, the double-SL MnBi2Te4 thin film becomes a Chern insulator with a high Chern number of 3. These discoveries inspired the design of low-power memory prototypes for future AFM spintronic applications.
During the projects, we published four papers and one paper is under preparation. Our work was published in renowned Journals such like Physical Review Research, Physical Review B and New Journal of Physics
Furthermore the researcher participated in 7 dissemination activities i.e. conferences, seminars, invited talks and workshops in Germany, Spain, Belgium and USA (see list below) and also participated in the activities organized by the MPSD Theory Department for the DESY Open Day and Science Night, Hamburg, (2019 Nov.)
On the other hand, In the case where the full quantum nature of the light field is kept, i.e. one treats the particle nature of the photon, we require a theory of quantum electrodynamics and the treatment becomes much more complicated. However, this complication also comes with the benefit of enlarged possibilities of control. Hybrid light-matter states can display an interesting mixture of properties between the fermionic and bosonic ones. Exploring this so-called cavity-control is relatively young in the solid-state context and will be an ambitious goal in this proposal. We are going on in this field by using the experience grained from this project.