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Journal Article

Quasi-symmetry-protected topology in a semi-metal

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Putzke,  C.
Laboratory of Quantum Materials (QMAT), Institute of Materials (IMX), École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL);
Microstructured Quantum Matter Department, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Society;

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2108.02279.pdf
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Citation

Guo, C., Hu, L., Putzke, C., Diaz, J., Huang, X., Manna, K., et al. (2022). Quasi-symmetry-protected topology in a semi-metal. Nature Physics, 18(7), 813-818. doi:10.1038/s41567-022-01604-0.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000A-7838-1
Abstract
The crystal symmetry of a material dictates the type of topological band structure it may host, and therefore, symmetry is the guiding principle to find topological materials. Here we introduce an alternative guiding principle, which we call ‘quasi-symmetry’. This is the situation where a Hamiltonian has exact symmetry at a lower order that is broken by higher-order perturbation terms. This enforces finite but parametrically small gaps at some low-symmetry points in momentum space. Untethered from the restraints of symmetry, quasi-symmetries eliminate the need for fine tuning as they enforce that sources of large Berry curvature occur at arbitrary chemical potentials. We demonstrate that quasi-symmetry in the semi-metal CoSi stabilizes gaps below 2 meV over a large near-degenerate plane that can be measured in the quantum oscillation spectrum. The application of in-plane strain breaks the crystal symmetry and gaps the degenerate point, observable by new magnetic breakdown orbits. The quasi-symmetry, however, does not depend on spatial symmetries and hence transmission remains fully coherent. These results demonstrate a class of topological materials with increased resilience to perturbations such as strain-induced crystalline symmetry breaking, which may lead to robust topological applications as well as unexpected topology beyond the usual space group classifications.