Affiliation:
1. Johns Hopkins University
2. University of Pennsylvania
Abstract
It has been proposed that topological insulators can be best
characterized not as surface conductors, but as
bulk magnetoelectrics that – under the right
conditions– have a universal quantized magnetoelectric response
coefficient \boldsymbol{e^2/2 h}𝐞2/2𝐡.
However, it is not clear to what extent these conditions are achievable
in real materials that can have disorder, finite chemical potential,
residual dissipation, and even inversion symmetry. This has led to some
confusion and misconceptions. The primary goal of this work is to
illustrate exactly under what real life scenarios and in what context
topological insulators can be described as magnetoelectrics. We explore
analogies of the 3D magnetoelectric response to electric polarization in
1D in detail, the formal vs. effective polarization and magnetoelectric
susceptibility, the \boldsymbol{\frac{1}{2}}12
quantized surface quantum Hall effect, the multivalued nature of the
magnetoelectric susceptibility, the role of inversion symmetry, the
effects of dissipation, and the necessity for finite frequency
measurements. We present these issues from the perspective of
experimentalists who have struggled to take the beautiful theoretical
ideas and to try to measure their (sometimes subtle) physical
consequences in messy real material systems.
Funder
Army Research Office
National Science Foundation
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
51 articles.
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