Spin Hall conductivity in Bi1-xSbx as an experimental test of bulk-boundary correspondence

Abstract

Bulk-boundary correspondence is a foundational principle underlying the electronic band structure and physical behavior of topological quantum materials. Although it has been rigorously tested in topological systems where the physical properties involve charge currents, it remains unclear whether bulk-boundary correspondence should also hold for non-conserved spin currents. We study charge-to-spin conversion in a canonical topological insulator, Bi1-xSbx, to address this fundamentally unresolved question. We use spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance measurements to accurately probe the charge-to-spin conversion efficiency in epitaxial Bi1-xSbx~thin films of high structural quality spanning the entire range of composition, including both trivial and topological band structures, as verified using in vacuo angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. From these measurements, we deduce the effective spin Hall conductivity (SHC) and find excellent agreement with the values predicted by tight-binding calculations for the intrinsic SHC of the bulk bands. These results provide strong evidence that the strong spin-orbit entanglement of bulk states well below the Fermi energy connects directly to the SHC in epitaxial Bi1-xSbx~films interfaced with a metallic ferromagnet. The excellent agreement between theory and experiment points to the generic value of analyses focused entirely on bulk properties, even for topological systems involving non-conserved spin currents.

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