à 
Prix: Entrée libre
Auditorium (salle 1035)
5155, chemin de la rampe
Montréal (QC) Canada  H3T 2B2

Maxim Dzero, Department of Physics, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, USA

The application of ideas developed in topology to the electronic band structure led to an intriguing discovery: materials can conduct electricity at the surface while remaining insulating at the bulk. These materials, called topological insulators, will have transformative impact on spintronics, low-power transport, and quantum computing. The search for a true topological insulator took years because even best candidates exhibited significant bulk conductivity. Only recently, literally in the past few months, several experimental groups established that samarium hexaboride, discovered in 1969 in Bell Labs, is a first topological insulator in its bulk form. In my talk, I review the theory which paved the way for this discovery. I will explain how crystalline symmetry, electron-electron interactions, and orbital degeneracy contribute to protecting the topological states in SmB6. In addition, I will discuss the experimental signatures of metallic surface states. Finally, I formulate the theoretical principles for discovering new topological insulators with designable properties.

Site web du groupe du Prof. Dzero's

Cette conférence est présentée par le RQMP Versant Nord du Département de physique de l'Université de Montréal et le Département de génie physique de Polytechnique Montréal.

The Discovery of the First Topological Kondo Insulator: The tale of SmB6
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