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Most electronic properties of metals are determined solely by the low-energy states around the Fermi level, and for topological metals/semimetals, these low-energy states become distinct because of their unusual energy dispersion and emergent pseudospin degree of freedom. Here, we propose a class of materials which are termed as quadratic contact point (QCP) semimetals. In these materials, the conduction and valence bands contact at isolated points in the Brillouin zone, around which the band dispersions are quadratic along all three directions. We show that in the absence/presence of spin-orbit coupling, there may exist triply/quadruply-degenerate QCPs that are protected by the crystalline symmetry. We construct effective models to characterize the low-energy fermions near these QCPs. Under strong magnetic field, unlike the usual 3D electron gas, there appear unconventional features in the Landau spectrum. The QCP semimetal phase is adjacent to a variety of topological phases. For example, by breaking symmetries via Zeeman field or lattice strain, it can be transformed into a Weyl semimetal with Weyl and double Weyl points, a Z2 topological insulator/metal, or a Dirac semimetal. Via first-principles calculations, we identify realistic materials Cu2Se and RhAs3 as candidates for QCP semimetals.
This year, Liu textit{et al}. [Phys. Rev. B textbf{104}, L041405 (2021)] proposed a new class of topological phonons (TPs; i.e., one-nodal surface (NS) phonons), which provides an effective route for realizing one-NSs in phonon systems. In this work,
Nodal loops in two-dimensional (2D) systems are typically vulnerable against spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Here, we explore 2D systems with a type of doubly degenerate nodal loops that are robust under SOC and feature an hourglass type dispersion. We pr
We propose a new concept of two-dimensional (2D) Dirac semiconductor which is characterized by the emergence of fourfold degenerate band crossings near the band edge and provide a generic approach to realize this novel semiconductor in the community
Multiple mechanisms for extremely large magnetoresistance (XMR) found in many topologically nontrivial/trivial semimetals have been theoretically proposed, but experimentally it is unclear which mechanism is responsible in a particular sample. In thi
The conventional k.p method fails to capture the full and essential physics of many symmetry enriched multiple nodal line structures in the three dimensional Brillouin zone. Here we present a new and systematical method to construct the effective lat