Robustness and universality of surface states in Dirac materials

Ballistically propagating topologically protected states harbor exotic transport phenomena of wide interest. Here we describe a nontopological mechanism that produces such states at the surfaces of generic Dirac materials, giving rise to propagating surface modes with energies near the bulk band cro...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shtanko, Oles, Levitov, Leonid
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Format: Article
Published: National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121119
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4193-6254
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4268-731X
Description
Summary:Ballistically propagating topologically protected states harbor exotic transport phenomena of wide interest. Here we describe a nontopological mechanism that produces such states at the surfaces of generic Dirac materials, giving rise to propagating surface modes with energies near the bulk band crossing. The robustness of surface states originates from the unique properties of Dirac–Bloch wavefunctions which exhibit strong coupling to generic boundaries. Surface states, described by Jackiw–Rebbi-type bound states, feature a number of interesting properties. Mode dispersion is gate tunable, exhibiting a wide variety of different regimes, including nondispersing flat bands and linear crossings within the bulk bandgap. The ballistic wavelike character of these states resembles the properties of topologically protected states; however, it requires neither topological restrictions nor additional crystal symmetries. The Dirac surface states are weakly sensitive to surface disorder and can dominate edge transport at the energies near the Dirac point.