After establishing the fundamental understanding and the high throughput topological characterization of nearly all inorganic three-dimensional materials, the general interest and the demand of functional applications drive the research of topological insulators to the exploration of systems with a more robust topological nature and fewer fabrication challenges. The successful demonstration of the room-temperature quantum spin Hall (QSH) states in bismuthene/SiC(0001), thus, triggers the search of two-dimensional topological systems that are experimentally easy to access and of even larger topological gaps. In this work, we propose a family of III-V honeycomb monolayers on SiO$_{2}$ to be the next generation of large gap QSH systems, based on which a spintronic device may potentially operate at room temperature due to its enlarged topological gap ($\sim$ 900 meV) as compared to bismuthene/SiC(0001). Fundamentally, this also realizes a band-inversion type QSH insulator that is distinct to the Kane-Mele type bismuthene/SiC(0001).
Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Report on missing references is welcome