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Dirac semimetal (DSM) is a phase of matter, whose elementary excitation is described by the relativistic Dirac equation. Its parity-time symmetry enforces the linear-dispersed Dirac cone in the momentum space to be non-chiral, leading to surface states connected adiabatically to a topologically trivial surface state. Inspired by the flavor symmetry in particle physics, we theoretically propose a massless chiral Dirac equation linking two Weyl fields with the identical chirality by assuming SU(2) isospin symmetry, independent of the space-time rotation exchanging the two fields. Dramatically, such symmetry is hidden in certain solid-state spin-1/2 systems with negligible spin-orbit coupling, where the spin degree of freedom is decoupled with the lattice. Therefore, it cannot be explained by the conventional (magnetic) space group framework. The corresponding system is called chiral DSM. The four-fold degenerate Dirac fermion manifests linear dispersion and a Chern number of +2/-2, leading to a robust network of topologically protected Fermi arcs throughout the Brillouin zone. For material realization, we show that the transition-metal chalcogenide CoNb3S6 with experimentally confirmed collinear antiferromagnetic order is ideal for chiral DSM. Our work unprecedentedly reveals a condensed-matter counterpart of the flavor symmetry in particle physics, leading to further possibilities of emergent phenomena in quantum materials.
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