Abstract:A Weyl semimetal is a crystal which hosts Weyl fermions as emergent quasiparticles and admits a topological classification that protects Fermi arc surface states on the boundary of a bulk sample. This unusual electronic structure has deep analogies with particle physics and leads to unique topological properties. We report the experimental discovery of the first Weyl semimetal, TaAs. Using photoemission spectroscopy, we directly observe Fermi arcs on the surface, as well as the Weyl fermion cones and Weyl nodes in the bulk of TaAs single crystals.We find that Fermi arcs terminate on the Weyl nodes, consistent with their topological character.Our work opens the field for the experimental study of Weyl fermions in physics and materials science.NoteAdded: This experimental discovery (Science 2015) is based on our earlier 2014 theoretical discovery/prediction reported at [Huang et al., Nature Commun. 6:7373 (2015)
Weyl fermions are massless chiral fermions that play an important role in quantum field theory but have never been observed as fundamental particles. A Weyl semimetal is an unusual crystal that hosts Weyl fermions as quasiparticle excitations and features Fermi arcs on its surface. Such a semimetal not only provides a condensed matter realization of the anomalies in quantum field theories but also demonstrates the topological classification beyond the gapped topological insulators. Here, we identify a topological Weyl semimetal state in the transition metal monopnictide materials class. Our first-principles calculations on TaAs reveal its bulk Weyl fermion cones and surface Fermi arcs. Our results show that in the TaAs-type materials the Weyl semimetal state does not depend on fine-tuning of chemical composition or magnetic order, which opens the door for the experimental realization of Weyl semimetals and Fermi arc surface states in real materials.
Symmetry-broken three-dimensional (3D) topological Dirac semimetal systems with strong spin-orbit coupling can host many exotic Hall-like phenomena and Weyl fermion quantum transport. Here, using high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we performed systematic electronic structure studies on Cd 3 As 2 , which has been predicted to be the parent material, from which many unusual topological phases can be derived. We observe a highly linear bulk band crossing to form a 3D dispersive Dirac cone projected at the Brillouin zone centre by studying the (001)-cleaved surface. Remarkably, an unusually high in-plane Fermi velocity up to 1.5 Â 10 6 ms À 1 is observed in our samples, where the mobility is known up to 40,000 cm 2 V À 1 s À 1 , suggesting that Cd 3 As 2 can be a promising candidate as an anisotropic-hypercone (three-dimensional) high spin-orbit analogue of 3D graphene. Our discovery of the Dirac-like bulk topological semimetal phase in Cd 3 As 2 opens the door for exploring higher dimensional spin-orbit Dirac physics in a real material.
Three types of fermions play a fundamental role in our understanding of nature: Dirac, Majorana and Weyl. Whereas Dirac fermions have been known for decades, the latter two have not been observed as any fundamental particle in high-energy physics, and have emerged as a much-sought-out treasure in condensed matter physics. A Weyl semimetal is a novel crystal whose low-energy electronic excitations behave as Weyl fermions. It has received worldwide interest and is believed to open the next era of condensed matter physics after graphene and three-dimensional topological insulators. However, experimental research has been held back because Weyl semimetals are extremely rare in nature. Here, we present the experimental discovery of the Weyl semimetal state in an inversion-symmetry-breaking single-crystalline solid, niobium arsenide (NbAs). Utilizing the combination of soft X-ray and ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy, we systematically study both the surface and bulk electronic structure of NbAs. We experimentally observe both the Weyl cones in the bulk and the Fermi arcs on the surface of this system. Our ARPES data, in agreement with our theoretical band structure calculations, identify the Weyl semimetal state in NbAs, which provides a real platform to test the potential of Weyltronics. W eyl semimetals have received significant attention in recent years because they extend the classification of topological phases beyond insulators, host exotic Fermi arc surface states, demonstrate unusual transport phenomena and provide an emergent condensed matter realization of Weyl fermions, which do not exist as fundamental particles in the standard model 1-21 . Such kind of topologically non-trivial semimetals are believed to open a new era in condensed matter physics. In contrast to topological insulators, where only the surface states are interesting, a Weyl semimetal features unusual band structure in the bulk and on the surface, leading to novel phenomena and potential applications. This opens up unparalleled research opportunities, where both bulk-and surface-sensitive experimental probes can measure the topological nature and detect quantum phenomena. In the bulk, a Weyl semimetal has a band structure with band crossings, Weyl nodes, which are associated with definite chiral charges. Unlike the two-dimensional Dirac points in graphene, the surface-state Dirac point of a threedimensional topological insulator or the three-dimensional Dirac points in the bulk of a Dirac semimetal, the degeneracy associated with a Weyl node does not require any symmetry for its protection, other than the translation symmetry of the crystal lattice. The low-energy quasiparticle excitations of a Weyl semimetal are chiral fermions described by the Weyl equation, well known in highenergy physics, which gives rise to a condensed matter analogue of the chiral anomaly associated with a negative magnetoresistance in transport [16][17][18][19][20][21] . On the surface, the non-trivial topology guarantees the existence of surface states in the f...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.