Dirac materials
T. O. Wehling, A. M. Black-Schaffer, and A. V. Balatsky

TL;DR
This paper reviews the concept of Dirac materials, highlighting their universal properties, experimental identification, symmetry control, and the rich physics arising from Dirac fermions in various condensed matter systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of how Dirac fermions emerge in diverse materials, their universal properties, and the role of symmetries in controlling their behavior.
Findings
Dirac fermions exhibit universal low-energy properties across different materials.
Experimental techniques like ARPES and STM identify Dirac excitations.
Symmetry breaking induces a finite Dirac mass, altering material properties.
Abstract
A wide range of materials, like d-wave superconductors, graphene, and topological insulators, share a fundamental similarity: their low-energy fermionic excitations behave as massless Dirac particles rather than fermions obeying the usual Schrodinger Hamiltonian. This emergent behavior of Dirac fermions in condensed matter systems defines the unifying framework for a class of materials we call "Dirac materials''. In order to establish this class of materials, we illustrate how Dirac fermions emerge in multiple entirely different condensed matter systems and we discuss how Dirac fermions have been identified experimentally using electron spectroscopy techniques (angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and scanning tunneling spectroscopy). As a consequence of their common low-energy excitations, this diverse set of materials shares a significant number of universal properties in the…
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