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Growth, Structural and Electrical Characterization of Topological Dirac Materials


Type

Thesis

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Abstract

We are living in an era of digital electronics. The number of robots have already exceeded the human population of the entire earth. An article in the Guardian newspaper dated 30th March 2018 suggests that 10 million UK workers will be jobless within 15 years as they will be replaced by robots. These astonishing facts shed light on the importance of knowledge and how important it is to use it wisely for our benefit without ultimately destroying us. Knowledge in all forms is accessible without going to a library or buying a newspaper. Furthermore to access information, we often use sleek devices such as smart phones, using highly developed multimedia platforms which consume large amounts of power. In 2016, IBM found that humans create 2.5 quintillion bytes of data daily. Since high computing usage is related to large power consumption, the basic building block of electronics i.e. the transistor is required to be more power efficient. This is now possible through spintronics, where the spin of an electron is exploited instead of the charge. A new class of exotic materials called topological insulators are predicted to exhibit efficient spintronic applications. These materials can conduct spin polarised current on their surface while remaining completely insulting from the inside. Moreover, doping topological insulators with magnetic impurities unlocks new avenues for spin memory devices in the form of a single spin polarized dissipationless conduction channel. In topological insulators, there is always a contribution from the inside (bulk) in addition to surface conduction, thereby yielding charge transport rather than spin transport. On this basis, the aim of my PhD was to explore techniques to grow, characterize, fabricate and measure devices on topological Dirac materials, with the hope to experimentally distinguish the bulk from the surface states and also exploit their exotic properties arising from opening of the bulk band gap by intentional magnetic doping. Samples consisted of thin films of Bi2Se3, Sb2Te3, Cr doped Sb2Te3, bilayers of Dy doped Bi2Te3/Cr doped Sb2Te3 and Cd3As2 nanowires. It was found that a seed layer of an undoped topological insulator was a crucial first step to ensure high quality growth by molecular beam epitaxy, followed by the desired stoichiometry. By physically doping Sb2Te3 with Cr, a successful control of the magnetic and electrical properties such as coercivity, anomalous Hall resistance RA xy, Curie temperature Tc, carrier density and mobility were achieved. A substitutional Cr doping ranging from 7.5% to 38% was attained revealing a Tc reaching up to 186 K. Gated electrical measurements displayed a change in RA xy and carrier density by ~ 50% on applicating of just -3 V gate bias in a sample with 29% doping. A comparison between electrical transport, Magneto-optical Kerr effect and terahertz time domain spectroscopy measurements revealed that the mechanism of magnetization was RKKY mediated. Furthermore, the bilayer structure displays a clear exchange bias coupling arising from the proximity of the antiferromagnetic Dy doped Bi2Te3 layer with the ferromagnetic Cr doped Sb2Te3 layer. Electrical transport measurements on Bi2Se3 Hall bars fabricated using Ar+ milling and wet chemical etching were compared. The results showed a more bulk type response in the chemical etched sample even though Ar+ milling was responsible for creating more disorder in the system leading to a higher carrier density and lower mobility. A thickness dependent study on Sb2Te3 thin films revealed a single conducting channel associated with a coupled surface and bulk state for a 12 nm sample, compared to, two conducting channels associated with the top and bottom surfaces for the 25 nm sample. Electrical transport on Dirac semimetal Cd3As2 nanowires reveal an ultra-high mobility of 56884 cm2V-1s-1 at 1.8 K from analysis of Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations. By studying various Dirac materials, new avenues for practical device applications can be explored.

Description

Date

2018-06-28

Advisors

Barnes, Crispin

Keywords

Topological Insulators, electrical transport, Magnetically doped Topological insulators, MBE growth

Qualification

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Awarding Institution

University of Cambridge
Sponsorship
The Cambridge Commonwealth Trust, SGPC, The Philosophical Society, Queens college

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