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This paper reports on the topological effects of three-dimensional (3D) porous graphene with tunable pore sizes and a preserved 2D graphene system of Dirac quasiparticles on its electrical properties. This 3D architecture is characterized by the intrinsic curvature of smoothly interconcnected graphene sheets without edges, the structures and properties of which can be controlled with its pore sizes. The impact of pore size on the electrical transport properties was investigated through magnetoresistance measurements. We observed that 3D graphene with small pores exhibits transitioning to weak localization with decreasing temperature. The comparison with the theory based on the quantum correction clarified that an increase in the intrinsic curvature significantly induces the intervalley scattering event, which breaks the chirality. This increase in the intervalley scattering rate originates from the unique topological effects of 3D graphene, i.e., the topological defects required to form the high curvature and the resulting chirality mixing. We also discuss the scattering processes due to microscopic chemical bonding states as found by high spatial-resolved X-ray photoemission spectral imaging, to support the validity of our finding.
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We use photoemission spectroscopy to discover the first topological magnet in three dimensions, the material Co$_2$MnGa.
Recently it was suggested that transient excitonic instability can be realized in optically-pumped two-dimensional (2D) Dirac materials (DMs), such as graphene and topological insulator surface states. Here we discuss the possibility of achieving a t
The three-dimensional topological semimetals represent a new quantum state of matter. Distinct from the surface state in the topological insulators that exhibits linear dispersion in two-dimensional momentum plane, the three-dimensional semimetals ho