Control of electronic topology in a strongly correlated electron system

  • Sami Dzsaber
  • , Diego A. Zocco
  • , Alix McCollam
  • , Franziska Weickert
  • , Ross McDonald
  • , Mathieu Taupin
  • , Gaku Eguchi
  • , Xinlin Yan
  • , Andrey Prokofiev
  • , Lucas M.K. Tang
  • , Bryan Vlaar
  • , Laurel E. Winter
  • , Marcelo Jaime
  • , Qimiao Si
  • , Silke Paschen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

It is becoming increasingly clear that breakthrough in quantum applications necessitates materials innovation. In high demand are conductors with robust topological states that can be manipulated at will. This is what we demonstrate in the present work. We discover that the pronounced topological response of a strongly correlated “Weyl-Kondo” semimetal can be genuinely manipulated—and ultimately fully suppressed—by magnetic fields. We understand this behavior as a Zeeman-driven motion of Weyl nodes in momentum space, up to the point where the nodes meet and annihilate in a topological quantum phase transition. The topologically trivial but correlated background remains unaffected across this transition, as is shown by our investigations up to much larger fields. Our work lays the ground for systematic explorations of electronic topology, and boosts the prospect for topological quantum devices.

Original languageEnglish
Article number5729
JournalNature Communications
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

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