Abstract

In a first-order topological phase with sublattice degrees of freedom, a change in the boundary sublattice termination has no effect on the existence of gapless boundary states in dimensions higher than one. However, such a change may strongly affect the physical properties of those boundary states. Motivated by this observation, we perform a systematic study of the impact of sublattice terminations on the boundary physics on the two-dimensional kagome lattice. We find that the energies of the Dirac points of helical edge states in two-dimensional first-order topological kagome insulators sensitively depend on the terminating sublattices at the edge. Remarkably, this property admits the realization of a time-reversal invariant second-order topological superconducting phase with highly controllable Majorana Kramers pairs at the corners and sublattice domain walls by putting the topological kagome insulator in proximity to a $d$-wave superconductor. Moreover, substituting the $d$-wave superconductor with a conventional $s$-wave superconductor, we find that highly controllable Majorana zero modes can also be realized at the corners and sublattice domain walls if an in-plane Zeeman field is additionally applied. Our study reveals promising platforms to implement highly controllable Majorana zero modes.

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