The conventional bulk-boundary correspondence directly connects the number of topological edge states in a finite system with the topological invariant in the bulk band structure with periodic boundary condition (PBC). However, recent studies show that this principle fails in certain non-Hermitian systems with broken reciprocity, which stems from the non-Hermitian skin effect (NHSE) in the finite system where most of the eigenstates decay exponentially from the system boundary. In this work, we experimentally demonstrate a 1D non-Hermitian topological circuit with broken reciprocity by utilizing the unidirectional coupling feature of the voltage follower module. The topological edge state is observed at the boundary of an open circuit through an impedance spectra measurement between adjacent circuit nodes. We confirm the inapplicability of the conventional bulk-boundary correspondence by comparing the circuit Laplacian between the periodic boundary condition (PBC) and open boundary condition (OBC). Instead, a recently proposed non-Bloch bulk-boundary condition based on a non-Bloch winding number faithfully predicts the number of topological edge states.
Recent advances in digitally programmable metamaterials have accelerated the development of reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS). However, the excessive use of active components (e.g., pin diodes and varactor diodes) leads to high costs, especially for those operating at millimeter-wave frequencies, impeding their large-scale deployments in RIS. Here, we introduce an entirely different approach—moiré metasurfaces—to implement dynamic beamforming through mutual twists of two closely stacked metasurfaces. The superposition of two high-spatial-frequency patterns produces a low-spatial-frequency moiré pattern through the moiré effect, which provides the surface impedance profiles to generate desired radiation patterns. We demonstrate experimentally that the direction of the radiated beams can continuously sweep over the entire reflection space along predesigned trajectories by simply adjusting the twist angle and the overall orientation. Our work opens previously unexplored directions for synthesizing far-field scattering through the direct contact of mutually twisted metallic patterns with different plane symmetry groups.
Topological phases of matter are conventionally characterized by the bulk-boundary correspondence in Hermitian systems. The topological invariant of the bulk in d dimensions corresponds to the number of (d − 1) -dimensional boundary states. By extension, higher-order topological insulators reveal a bulk-edge-corner correspondence, such that nth order topological phases feature (d − n)-dimensional boundary states. The advent of non-Hermitian topological systems sheds new light on the emergence of the non-Hermitian skin effect (NHSE) with an extensive number of boundary modes under open boundary conditions. Still, the higher-order NHSE remains largely unexplored, particularly in the experiment. An unsupervised approach-physics-graph-informed machine learning (PGIML)-to enhance the data mining ability of machine learning with limited domain knowledge is introduced. Through PGIML, the second-order NHSE in a 2D non-Hermitian topoelectrical circuit is experimentally demonstrated. The admittance spectra of the circuit exhibit an extensive number of corner skin modes and extreme sensitivity of the spectral flow to the boundary conditions. The violation of the conventional bulk-boundary correspondence in the second-order NHSE implies that modification of the topological band theory is inevitable in higher dimensional non-Hermitian systems.
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