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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164954
Title: | Tunable topologically driven Fermi arc van Hove singularities | Authors: | Sanchez, Daniel S. Cochran, Tyler A. Belopolski, Ilya Cheng, Zi-Jia Yang, Xian P. Liu, Yiyuan Hou, Tao Xu, Xitong Manna, Kaustuv Shekhar, Chandra Yin, Jia-Xin Borrmann, Horst Chikina, Alla Denlinger, Jonathan D. Strocov, Vladimir N. Xie, Weiwei Felser, Claudia Jia, Shuang Chang, Guoqing Hasan, M. Zahid |
Keywords: | Science::Physics::Electricity and magnetism Engineering |
Issue Date: | 2023 | Source: | Sanchez, D. S., Cochran, T. A., Belopolski, I., Cheng, Z., Yang, X. P., Liu, Y., Hou, T., Xu, X., Manna, K., Shekhar, C., Yin, J., Borrmann, H., Chikina, A., Denlinger, J. D., Strocov, V. N., Xie, W., Felser, C., Jia, S., Chang, G. & Hasan, M. Z. (2023). Tunable topologically driven Fermi arc van Hove singularities. Nature Physics. https://dx.doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-022-01892-6 | Project: | NRF-NRFF13-2021-0010 Nanyang Assistant Professorship (NAP) |
Journal: | Nature Physics | Abstract: | The classification scheme of electronic phases uses two prominent paradigms: correlations and topology. Electron correlations give rise to superconductivity and charge density waves, while the quantum geometric Berry phase gives rise to electronic topology. The intersection of these two paradigms has initiated an effort to discover electronic instabilities at or near the Fermi level of topological materials. Here we identify the electronic topology of chiral fermions as the driving mechanism for creating van Hove singularities that host electronic instabilities in the surface band structure. We observe that the chiral fermion conductors RhSi and CoSi possess two types of helicoid arc van Hove singularities that we call type I and type II. In RhSi, the type I variety drives a switching of the connectivity of the helicoid arcs at different energies. In CoSi, we measure a type II intra-helicoid arc van Hove singularity near the Fermi level. Chemical engineering methods are able to tune the energy of these singularities. Finally, electronic susceptibility calculations allow us to visualize the dominant Fermi surface nesting vectors of the helicoid arc singularities, consistent with recent observations of surface charge density wave ordering in CoSi. This suggests a connection between helicoid arc singularities and surface charge density waves. | URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164954 | ISSN: | 1745-2473 | DOI: | 10.1038/s41567-022-01892-6 | Schools: | School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences | Rights: | © 2023 The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. All rights reserved. This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review and is subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use, but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1038/s41567-022-01892-6. | Fulltext Permission: | open | Fulltext Availability: | With Fulltext |
Appears in Collections: | SPMS Journal Articles |
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NPHYS-2022-04-00961B.pdf | accepted version | 4.67 MB | Adobe PDF | ![]() View/Open |
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