Topological nodal semimetals
A. A. Burkov, M. D. Hook, Leon Balents

TL;DR
This paper explores topological nodal semimetals, specifically Weyl and line node types, highlighting their surface states, topological protection, and unique transport properties arising from their band-touching points or lines.
Contribution
It provides a general framework for understanding nodal semimetals via perturbations of insulator phase transitions and offers explicit models demonstrating their topological surface states.
Findings
Weyl semimetals feature Fermi arc surface states with chiral edge modes.
Line node semimetals have flat, dispersionless surface states.
Both types exhibit unusual transport properties, including quantum critical scaling.
Abstract
We present a study of "nodal semimetal" phases, in which non-degenerate conduction and valence bands touch at points (the "Weyl semimetal") or lines (the "line node semimetal") in three-dimensional momentum space. We discuss a general approach to such states by perturbation of the critical point between a normal insulator (NI) and a topological insulator (TI), breaking either time reversal (TR) or inversion symmetry. We give an explicit model realization of both types of states in a NI--TI superlattice structure with broken TR symmetry. Both the Weyl and the line-node semimetals are characterized by topologically-protected surface states, although in the line-node case some additional symmetries must be imposed to retain this topological protection. The edge states have the form of "Fermi arcs" in the case of the Weyl semimetal: these are chiral gapless edge states, which exist in a…
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