Abstract

Recent theory predicted that the quantum spin Hall effect, a fundamentally new quantum state of matter that exists at zero external magnetic field, may be realized in HgTe/(Hg,Cd)Te quantum wells. We fabricated such sample structures with low density and high mobility in which we could tune, through an external gate voltage, the carrier conduction from n-type to p-type, passing through an insulating regime. For thin quantum wells with well width d < 6.3 nanometers, the insulating regime showed the conventional behavior of vanishingly small conductance at low temperature. However, for thicker quantum wells ( d > 6.3 nanometers), the nominally insulating regime showed a plateau of residual conductance close to 2 e 2 / h , where e is the electron charge and h is Planck's constant. The residual conductance was independent of the sample width, indicating that it is caused by edge states. Furthermore, the residual conductance was destroyed by a small external magnetic field. The quantum phase transition at the critical thickness, d = 6.3 nanometers, was also independently determined from the magnetic field–induced insulator-to-metal transition. These observations provide experimental evidence of the quantum spin Hall effect.

Keywords

Insulator (electricity)Condensed matter physicsQuantum wellPhysicsQuantum Hall effectQuantum spin Hall effectSpin (aerodynamics)Quantum mechanicsOptoelectronicsMagnetic field

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
318
Issue
5851
Pages
766-770
Citations
5913
Access
Closed

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5913
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65
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Cite This

Markus König, S. Wiedmann, C. Brüne et al. (2007). Quantum Spin Hall Insulator State in HgTe Quantum Wells. Science , 318 (5851) , 766-770. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1148047

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.1148047
PMID
17885096
arXiv
0710.0582

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Data completeness: 84%