A pressure-induced topological phase with large Berry curvature in Pb1- x Sn x Te

Sci Adv. 2017 May 31;3(5):e1602510. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1602510. eCollection 2017 May.

Abstract

The picture of how a gap closes in a semiconductor has been radically transformed by topological concepts. Instead of the gap closing and immediately reopening, topological arguments predict that, in the absence of inversion symmetry, a metallic phase protected by Weyl nodes persists over a finite interval of the tuning parameter (for example, pressure P). The gap reappears when the Weyl nodes mutually annihilate. We report evidence that Pb1-x Sn x Te exhibits this topological metallic phase. Using pressure to tune the gap, we have tracked the nucleation of a Fermi surface droplet that rapidly grows in volume with P. In the metallic state, we observe a large Berry curvature, which dominates the Hall effect. Moreover, a giant negative magnetoresistance is observed in the insulating side of phase boundaries, in accord with ab initio calculations. The results confirm the existence of a topological metallic phase over a finite pressure interval.

Keywords: Berry curvature; Gap tuning by pressure; PbSnTe; Topological phases of matter; Weyl fermions; anomalous Hall effect; giant magnetoresistance.