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Topological states nurtures the emergence of devices with unprecedented functions in photonics, plasmonics, acoustics and phononics. As one of the recently discovered members, higher-order topological insulators (HOTIs) have been increasingly explored, featuring lower-dimensional topological boundary states, leading to rich mechanisms for topological manipulation, guiding and trapping of classical waves. Here, we provide an overview of current developments of HOTIs in classical waves including basic principles, unique physical properties, various experimental realizations, novel phenomena and potential applications. Based on these discussions, we remark on the trends and challenges in this field and the impacts of higher-order topology on other research fields.
Three-dimensional topological (crystalline) insulators are materials with an insulating bulk, but conducting surface states which are topologically protected by time-reversal (or spatial) symmetries. Here, we extend the notion of three-dimensional to
Pursuing topological phase and matter in a variety of systems is one central issue in current physical sciences and engineering. Motivated by the recent experimental observation of corner states in acoustic and photonic structures, we theoretically s
We study disorder effects in a two-dimensional system with chiral symmetry and find that disorder can induce a quadrupole topological insulating phase (a higher-order topological phase with quadrupole moments) from a topologically trivial phase. Thei
Conventional topological insulators support boundary states that have one dimension lower than the bulk system that hosts them, and these states are topologically protected due to quantized bulk dipole moments. Recently, higher-order topological insu
The disorder effects on higher-order topological phases in periodic systems have attracted much attention. However, in aperiodic systems such as quasicrystalline systems, the interplay between disorder and higher-order topology is still unclear. In t