Chiral anomaly from strain-induced gauge fields in Dirac and Weyl semimetals
D.I. Pikulin, Anffany Chen, M. Franz

TL;DR
This paper predicts observable effects of the chiral anomaly in Dirac and Weyl semimetals induced by strain-generated pseudo-electromagnetic fields, including resistance changes, mode segregation, and electromagnetic emissions.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of strain-induced pseudo-fields causing chiral anomaly effects in semimetals, expanding the understanding of topological phenomena under mechanical deformation.
Findings
Negative resistance contribution proportional to torsion strength
Spatial segregation of chiral modes forming a 'topological coaxial cable'
Ultrasonic attenuation and electromagnetic emission due to mechanical deformation
Abstract
Dirac and Weyl semimetals form an ideal platform for testing ideas developed in high energy physics to describe massless relativistic particles. One such quintessentially field-theoretic idea of chiral anomaly already resulted in the prediction and subsequent observation of the pronounced negative magnetoresistance in these novel materials for parallel electric and magnetic fields. Here we predict that the chiral anomaly occurs - and has experimentally observable consequences - when real electromagnetic fields E and B are replaced by strain-induced pseudo-electromagnetic fields e and b. For example, a uniform pseudomagnetic field b is generated when a Weyl semimetal nanowire is put under torsion. In accord with the chiral anomaly equation we predict a negative contribution to the wire resistance proportional to the square of the torsion strength. Remarkably, left and right moving chiral…
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