Electronic Evidence for Type II Weyl Semimetal State in MoTe2
Aiji Liang, Jianwei Huang, Simin Nie, Ying Ding, Qiang Gao, Cheng Hu,, Shaolong He, Yuxiao Zhang, Chenlu Wang, Bing Shen, Jing Liu, Ping Ai, Li Yu,, Xuan Sun, Wenjuan Zhao, Shoupeng Lv, Defa Liu, Cong Li, Yan Zhang, Yong Hu,, Yu Xu, Lin Zhao, Guodong Liu, Zhiqiang Mao

TL;DR
This study provides direct electronic evidence of type II Weyl semimetal states in MoTe2 using high-resolution ARPES, revealing unique surface and bulk electronic structures consistent with theoretical predictions.
Contribution
The paper experimentally confirms the existence of type II Weyl points in MoTe2 through advanced ARPES measurements, advancing understanding of topological semimetals.
Findings
Identification of a surface state connecting bulk electron and hole pockets
Observation of high-intensity features near the expected Weyl point energy
Evidence supporting the presence of two sets of type II Weyl points in MoTe2
Abstract
Topological quantum materials, including topological insulators and superconductors, Dirac semimetals and Weyl semimetals, have attracted much attention recently for their unique electronic structure, spin texture and physical properties. Very lately, a new type of Weyl semimetals has been proposed where the Weyl Fermions emerge at the boundary between electron and hole pockets in a new phase of matter, which is distinct from the standard type I Weyl semimetals with a point-like Fermi surface. The Weyl cone in this type II semimetals is strongly tilted and the related Fermi surface undergos a Lifshitz transition, giving rise to a new kind of chiral anomaly and other new physics. MoTe2 is proposed to be a candidate of a type II Weyl semimetal; the sensitivity of its topological state to lattice constants and correlation also makes it an ideal platform to explore possible topological…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Graphene research and applications · 2D Materials and Applications
