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Enhancing the Quantum Anomalous Hall Effect by Magnetic Codoping in a Topological Insulator.

Yunbo OuChang LiuGaoyuan JiangYang FengDongyang ZhaoWeixiong WuXiao-Xiao WangWei LiCanli SongLi-Li WangWenbo WangWeida WuYayu WangKe HeXu-Cun MaQi-Kun Xue
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2017)
The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect, which has been realized in magnetic topological insulators (TIs), is the key to applications of dissipationless quantum Hall edge states in electronic devices. However, investigations and utilizations of the QAH effect are limited by the ultralow temperatures needed to reach full quantization-usually below 100 mK in either Cr- or V-doped (Bi,Sb)2 Te3 of the two experimentally confirmed QAH materials. Here it is shown that by codoping Cr and V magnetic elements in (Bi,Sb)2 Te3 TI, the temperature of the QAH effect can be significantly increased such that full quantization is achieved at 300 mK, and zero-field Hall resistance of 0.97 h/e2 is observed at 1.5 K. A systematic transport study of the codoped (Bi,Sb)2 Te3 films with varied Cr/V ratios reveals that magnetic codoping improves the homogeneity of ferromagnetism and modulates the surface band structure. This work demonstrates magnetic codoping to be an effective strategy for achieving high-temperature QAH effect in TIs.
Keyphrases
  • molecularly imprinted
  • molecular dynamics
  • room temperature
  • resting state