Spectroscopic Evidence of Type II Weyl Semimetal State in WTe2
Chenlu Wang, Yan Zhang, Jianwei Huang, Simin Nie, Guodong Liu, Aiji, Liang, Yuxiao Zhang, Bing Shen, Jing Liu, Cheng Hu, Ying Ding, Defa Liu, Yong, Hu, Shaolong He, Lin Zhao, Li Yu, Jin Hu, Jiang Wei, Zhiqiang Mao, Youguo, Shi, Xiaowen Jia, Fengfeng Zhang, Shenjin Zhang

TL;DR
This paper provides spectroscopic evidence confirming WTe2 as a type II Weyl semimetal, revealing its unique electronic structure and surface states through advanced ARPES measurements, and establishing a basis for exploring novel physical phenomena.
Contribution
It is the first to experimentally identify the type II Weyl fermion state in WTe2 using laser-based ARPES, linking surface states with bulk electronic structures.
Findings
Identification of surface states consistent with type II Weyl semimetal band structure
Observation of a full electronic structure picture of WTe2
Agreement between experimental data and theoretical calculations
Abstract
Quantum topological materials, exemplified by topological insulators, three-dimensional Dirac semimetals and Weyl semimetals, have attracted much attention recently because of their unique electronic structure and physical properties. Very lately it is proposed that the three-dimensional Weyl semimetals can be further classified into two types. In the type I Weyl semimetals, a topologically protected linear crossing of two bands, i.e., a Weyl point, occurs at the Fermi level resulting in a point-like Fermi surface. In the type II Weyl semimetals, the Weyl point emerges from a contact of an electron and a hole pocket at the boundary resulting in a highly tilted Weyl cone. In type II Weyl semimetals, the Lorentz invariance is violated and a fundamentally new kind of Weyl Fermions is produced that leads to new physical properties. WTe2 is interesting because it exhibits anomalously large…
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