A minimal, "hydrogen atom" version of an inversion-breaking Weyl semimetal
Ilya Belopolski, Peng Yu, Daniel S. Sanchez, Yukiaki Ishida, Tay-Rong, Chang, Songtian S. Zhang, Su-Yang Xu, Daixiang Mou, Hao Zheng, Guoqing Chang,, Guang Bian, Horng-Tay Jeng, Takeshi Kondo, Adam Kaminski, Hsin Lin, Zheng, Liu, Shik Shin, M. Zahid Hasan

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that TaIrTe4 is a minimal inversion-breaking Weyl semimetal with only four Weyl points, accessible via pump-probe ARPES, simplifying the study of Weyl physics and potential device applications.
Contribution
The study provides the first experimental confirmation of a minimal Weyl semimetal with four Weyl points using pump-probe ARPES, revealing accessible topological features.
Findings
TaIrTe4 has four Weyl points.
Weyl points and Fermi arcs are above the Fermi level.
TaIrTe4 is confirmed as a minimal inversion-breaking Weyl semimetal.
Abstract
The recent explosion of research interest in Weyl semimetals has led to many proposed Weyl semimetal candidates and a few experimental observations of a Weyl semimetal in real materials. Through this experience, we have come to appreciate that typical Weyl semimetals host many Weyl points. For instance, the first Weyl semimetal observed in experiment, TaAs, hosts 24 Weyl points. Similarly, the MoWTe series, recently under study as the first Type II Weyl semimetal, has eight Weyl points. However, it is well-understood that for a Weyl semimetal without inversion symmetry but with time-reversal symmetry, the minimum number of Weyl points is four. Realizing such a minimal Weyl semimetal is fundamentally relevant because it would offer the simplest "hydrogen atom" example of an inversion-breaking Weyl semimetal. At the same time, transport experiments and device applications…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Graphene research and applications · 2D Materials and Applications
