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Robustness against disorder and defects is a pivotal advantage of topological systems, manifested by absence of electronic backscattering in the quantum Hall and spin-Hall effects, and unidirectional waveguiding in their classical analogs. Two-dimensional (2D) topological insulators, in particular, provide unprecedented opportunities in a variety of fields due to their compact planar geometries compatible with the fabrication technologies used in modern electronics and photonics. Among all 2D topological phases, Chern insulators are to date the most reliable designs due to the genuine backscattering immunity of their non-reciprocal edge modes, brought via time-reversal symmetry breaking. Yet, such resistance to fabrication tolerances is limited to fluctuations of the same order of magnitude as their band gap, limiting their resilience to small perturbations only. Here, we tackle this vexing problem by introducing the concept of anomalous non-reciprocal topological networks, that survive disorder levels with strengths arbitrarily larger than their bandgap. We explore the general conditions to obtain such unusual effect in systems made of unitary three-port scattering matrices connected by phase links, and establish the superior robustness of the anomalous edge modes over the Chern ones to phase link disorder of arbitrarily large values. We confirm experimentally the exceptional resilience of the anomalous phase, and demonstrate its operation by building an ideal anomalous topological circulator despite its arbitrary shape and large number of ports. Our results pave the way to efficient, arbitrary planar energy transport on 2D substrates for wave devices with full protection against large fabrication flaws or imperfections.
The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state is a two-dimensional topological insulating state that has quantized Hall resistance of h/Ce2 and vanishing longitudinal resistance under zero magnetic field, where C is called the Chern number. The QAH effect h
Periodically driven systems can host so called anomalous topological phases, in which protected boundary states coexist with topologically trivial Floquet bulk bands. We introduce an anomalous version of reflection symmetry protected topological crys
Within a relativistic quantum formalism we examine the role of second-order corrections caused by the application of magnetic fields in two-dimensional topological and Chern insulators. This allows to reach analytical expressions for the change of th
We demonstrate, both theoretically and experimentally, the concept of non-linear second-order topological insulators, a class of bulk insulators with quantized Wannier centers and a bulk polarization directly controlled by the level of non-linearity.
In Hermitian topological systems, the bulk-boundary correspondence strictly constraints boundary transport to values determined by the topological properties of the bulk. We demonstrate that this constraint can be lifted in non-Hermitian Floquet insu