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Weyl, Dirac and high-fold chiral fermions in topological quantum materials

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 Added by Guoqing Chang
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Quantum materials hosting Weyl fermions have opened a new era of research in condensed matter physics. First proposed in 1929 in particle physics, Weyl fermions have yet to be observed as elementary particles. In 2015, Weyl fermions were detected as collective electronic excitations in the strong spin-orbit coupled material tantalum arsenide, TaAs. This discovery was followed by a flurry of experimental and theoretical explorations of Weyl phenomena in materials. Weyl materials naturally lend themselves to the exploration of the topological index associated with Weyl fermions and their divergent Berry curvature field, as well as the topological bulk-boundary correspondence giving rise to protected conducting surface states. Here, we review the broader class of Weyl topological phenomena in materials, starting with the observation of emergent Weyl fermions in the bulk and of Fermi arc states on the surface of the TaAs family of crystals by photoemission spectroscopy. We then discuss some of the exotic optical and magnetic responses observed in these materials, as well as the progress in developing some of the related chiral materials. We discuss the conceptual development of high-fold chiral fermions, which generalize Weyl fermions, and we review the observation of high-fold chiral fermion phases by taking the rhodium silicide, RhSi, family of crystals as a prime example. Lastly, we discuss recent advances in Weyl-line phases in magnetic topological materials. With this Review, we aim to provide an introduction to the basic concepts underlying Weyl physics in condensed matter, and to representative materials and their electronic structures and topology as revealed by spectroscopic studies. We hope this work serves as a guide for future theoretical and experimental explorations of chiral fermions and related topological quantum systems with potentially enhanced functionalities.



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Dirac semimetal (DSM) hosts four-fold degenerate isolated band-crossing points with linear dispersion, around which the quasiparticles resemble the relativistic Dirac Fermions. It can be described by a 4 * 4 massless Dirac Hamiltonian which can be decomposed into a pair of Weyl points or gaped into an insulator. Thus, crystal symmetry is critical to guarantee the stable existence. On the contrary, by breaking crystal symmetry, a DSM may transform into a Weyl semimetal (WSM) or a topological insulator (TI). Here, by taking hexagonal LiAuSe as an example, we find that it is a starfruit shaped multiple nodal chain semimetal in the absence of spin-orbit coupling(SOC). In the presence of SOC, it is an ideal DSM naturally with the Dirac points locating at Fermi level exactly, and it would transform into WSM phase by introducing external Zeeman field or by magnetic doping with rare-earth atom Sm. It could also transform into TI state by breaking rotational symmetry. Our studies show that DSM is a critical point for topological phase transition, and the conclusion can apply to most of the DSM materials, not limited to the hexagonal material LiAuSe.
Materials with triply-degenerate nodal points in their low-energy electronic spectrum produce crystalline-symmetry-enforced three-fold fermions, which conceptually lie between the two-fold Weyl and four-fold Dirac fermions. Here we show how a silver-based Dirac semimetal BaAgAs realizes three-fold fermions through our first-principles calculations combined with a low-energy effective $mathbf{k.p}$ model Hamiltonian analysis. BaAgAs is shown to harbor triply-degenerate nodal points, which lie on its $C_{3}$ rotation axis, and are protected by the $C_{6v}$($C_2otimes C_{3v}$) point-group symmetry in the absence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) effects. When the SOC is turned on, BaAgAs transitions into a nearly-ideal Dirac semimetal state with a pair of Dirac nodes lying on the $C_{3}$ rotation axis. We show that breaking inversion symmetry in the BaAgAs$_{1-x}$P$_x$ alloy yields a clean and tunable three-fold fermion semimetal. Systematic relaxation of other symmetries in BaAgAs generates a series of other topological phases. BaAgAs materials thus provide an ideal platform for exploring tunable topological properties associated with a variety of different fermionic excitations.
294 - J. Cayssol 2013
We present a short pedagogical introduction to the physics of Dirac materials, restricted to graphene and two- dimensional topological insulators. We start with a brief reminder of the Dirac and Weyl equations in the particle physics context. Turning to condensed matter systems, semimetallic graphene and various Dirac insulators are introduced, including the Haldane and the Kane-Mele topological insulators. We also discuss briefly experimental realizations in materials with strong spin-orbit coupling.
Topological materials are recently regarded as the idea catalysts due to the protected surface metallic states and high carrier mobility, however the fundamental mechanism and the underlying relationship between the catalytic performance and topological states are in debate. Here, by means of symmetry analysis and first-principles calculations, we discover that the electride material of C12A7 hosts the multiple-fold fermions due to the interstitial-electrons, with the sixfold- and fourfold- degenerate points locating at high symmetric points near the Fermi energy, which are identified as the underlying reason of the enhanced catalytic ability in C12A7-based catalysts. The multiple-fold fermions exhibit much longer Fermi arcs on the (001) surface than traditional Weyl/Dirac fermions, the surface is thus highly chemical active and possesses a low Gibbs free energy for the hydrogen evolution reaction. The underlying relationship between catalytic performance and the topological surface state is explicitly verified by artificially hole doping, external strain and similar electride without the Fermi arcs, where the Gibbs free energies are significantly increased when the Fermi arcs is shifted to higher energy level. This work offers a guiding principle for understanding catalytic nature of electrides and the topological quantum catalysts.
TaAs as one of the experimentally discovered topological Weyl semimetal has attracted intense interests recently. The ambient TaAs has two types of Weyl nodes which are not on the same energy level. As an effective way to tune lattice parameters and electronic interactions, high pressure is becoming a significant tool to explore new materials as well as their exotic states. Therefore, it is highly interesting to investigate the behaviors of topological Weyl fermions and possible structural phase transitions in TaAs under pressure. Here, with a combination of ab initio calculations and crystal structure prediction techniques, a new hexagonal P-6m2 phase is predicted in TaAs at pressure around 14 GPa. Surprisingly, this new phase is a topological semimetal with only single set of Weyl nodes exactly on the same energy level. The phase transition pressure from the experimental measurements, including electrical transport measurements and Raman spectroscopy, agrees with our theoretical prediction reasonably. Moreover, the P-6m2 phase seems to be quenched recoverable to ambient pressure, which increases the possibilities of further study on the exotic behaviors of single set of Weyl fermions, such as the interplay between surface states and other properties.
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