Observation of the nonlinear Hall effect under time reversal symmetric conditions
Qiong Ma, Su-Yang Xu, Huitao Shen, David Macneill, Valla Fatemi,, Andres M. Mier Valdivia, Sanfeng Wu, Tay-Rong Chang, Zongzheng Du, Chuang-Han, Hsu, Quinn D. Gibson, Shiang Fang, Efthimios Kaxiras, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi, Taniguchi, Robert J. Cava, Hai-Zhou Lu, Hsin Lin

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a nonlinear Hall effect in bilayer WTe2, a nonmagnetic 2D material, revealing a new way to detect Berry curvature without magnetic fields, with potential broad applications.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the observation of a nonlinear Hall effect in a nonmagnetic material, linking it to Berry curvature dipoles, which is a novel phenomenon in quantum materials research.
Findings
Nonlinear Hall voltage observed in bilayer WTe2 without magnetic field
Hall voltage exhibits quadratic dependence on current
NLHE provides a direct measure of Berry curvature dipole
Abstract
The electrical Hall effect is the production of a transverse voltage under an out-of-plane magnetic field. Historically, studies of the Hall effect have led to major breakthroughs including the discoveries of Berry curvature and the topological Chern invariants. In magnets, the internal magnetization allows Hall conductivity in the absence of external magnetic field. This anomalous Hall effect (AHE) has become an important tool to study quantum magnets. In nonmagnetic materials without external magnetic fields, the electrical Hall effect is rarely explored because of the constraint by time-reversal symmetry. However, strictly speaking, only the Hall effect in the linear response regime, i.e., the Hall voltage linearly proportional to the external electric field, identically vanishes due to time-reversal symmetry. The Hall effect in the nonlinear response regime, on the other hand, may…
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