Crystallographic splitting theorem for band representations and fragile topological photonic crystals
A. Alexandradinata, J. H\"oller, Chong Wang, Hengbin Cheng, Ling Lu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a crystallographic splitting theorem for band representations, enabling the analysis of fragile topological phases in photonic crystals and revealing that some surface states are not truly protected but removable.
Contribution
The work presents a new splitting theorem for band representations, providing computational tools to identify fragile topological insulators and their photonic analogs, challenging the notion of protected surface states.
Findings
Fragile topological insulators have removable surface states.
A new theorem simplifies the analysis of band representations.
Identified a fragile topological photonic crystal disproof of protected surface states.
Abstract
The fundamental building blocks in band theory are band representations (BRs): bands whose infinitely-numbered Wannier functions are generated (by action of a space group) from a finite number of symmetric Wannier functions centered on a point in space. This work aims to simplify questions on a multi-rank BR by splitting it into unit-rank bands, via the following crystallographic splitting theorem: being a rank- BR is equivalent to being splittable into a finite sum of bands indexed by , such that each band is spanned by a single, analytic Bloch function of , and any symmetry in the space group acts by permuting . Applying this theorem, we develop computationally efficient methods to determine whether a given energy band (of a tight-binding or Schr\"odinger Hamiltonian) is a BR, and, if so, how to numerically construct the corresponding…
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