| Literature DB >> 32194952 |
Xiangxi Cai1, Liping Ye1, Chunyin Qiu1, Meng Xiao1, Rui Yu1, Manzhu Ke1, Zhengyou Liu1,2.
Abstract
Dirac semimetals, the materials featuring fourfold degenerate Dirac points, are critical states of topologically distinct phases. Such gapless topological states have been accomplished by a band-inversion mechanism, in which the Dirac points can be annihilated pairwise by perturbations without changing the symmetry of the system. Here, we report an experimental observation of Dirac points that are enforced completely by the crystal symmetry using a nonsymmorphic three-dimensional phononic crystal. Intriguingly, our Dirac phononic crystal hosts four spiral topological surface states, in which the surface states of opposite helicities intersect gaplessly along certain momentum lines, as confirmed by additional surface measurements. The novel Dirac system may release new opportunities for studying elusive (pseudo) and offer a unique prototype platform for acoustic applications.Entities:
Keywords: Photoacoustics; Photonic devices
Year: 2020 PMID: 32194952 PMCID: PMC7064592 DOI: 10.1038/s41377-020-0273-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Fig. 1Symmetry-enforced Dirac points and quad-helicoid topological surface states in a nonsymmorphic phononic crystal.
a Schematics of the bcc unit (left panel) of the phononic crystal and its (010) surface (right panel) featured with two glide mirrors G and G. b 3D bcc BZ and its (010) surface BZ. The colored spheres highlight the bulk Dirac points with equal frequency and their projections onto the surface BZ. c Bulk bands simulated along several high-symmetry directions. d Schematic of the quad-helicoid surface state dispersions (color surfaces), where the gray cone labels the projection of bulk states. e Surface bands simulated along a circular momentum loop of radius 0.4π/a (as shown in f) centered at . The shadow regions indicate the projected bulk states. f 3D plot of the surface dispersion simulated in the first quadrant of the surface BZ. Bulk band projections are not shown for clarity
Fig. 2Experimental identification of the symmetry-enforced Dirac points.
a Experimental setup for measuring sound transmission. b Schematic of exciting bulk states according to the momentum conservation . c θ-resolved transmission spectra measured for different φ values. The slanted boundary (green line) in each panel corresponds to the ‘sound cone’ , beyond which no transmission can be measured. Insets: Simulated bulk states (shadow regions) projected along the y direction, scaled to the same range and ratio as the measured data
Fig. 3Experimental observation of quad-helicoid topological surface states.
a Experimental setup for the surface field measurements. The inset shows the details of the cover plate with circular holes opened or sealed. The plugs that sealed the holes were opened one-by-one during the measurement. b Isofrequency contours plotted in one surface BZ centered at (see the first panel). The color scale shows the experimental data compared with the corresponding simulation results (black curves). The orange spheres label the projected Dirac points, and the white dashed lines enclose the bulk band projections. c Frequency-dependent surface spectra (color scale) measured along the momentum path specified in the first panel of b