Colloquium: Topological Band Theory
Arun Bansil, Hsin Lin, Tanmoy Das

TL;DR
This review discusses the principles, methods, and recent experimental verifications of topological band theory, highlighting its role in discovering and characterizing topological materials across various classes and dimensions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of topological band theory, including evaluation methods, experimental validation, and a survey of predicted topological materials and future research directions.
Findings
Topological invariants can be evaluated in complex systems.
Experimental verification of topological states has advanced significantly.
A wide range of predicted topological materials spans many classes and dimensions.
Abstract
The first-principles band theory paradigm has been a key player not only in the process of discovering new classes of topologically interesting materials, but also for identifying salient characteristics of topological states, enabling direct and sharpened confrontation between theory and experiment. We begin this review by discussing underpinnings of the topological band theory, which basically involves a layer of analysis and interpretation for assessing topological properties of band structures beyond the standard band theory construct. Methods for evaluating topological invariants are delineated, including crystals without inversion symmetry and interacting systems. The extent to which theoretically predicted properties and protections of topological states have been verified experimentally is discussed, including work on topological crystalline insulators, disorder/interaction…
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