Tunable room temperature nonlinear Hall effect from the surfaces of elementary bismuth thin films
Pavlo Makushko, Sergey Kovalev, Yevhen Zabila, Igor Ilyakov, Alexey, Ponomaryov, Atiqa Arshad, Gulloo Lal Prajapati, Thales V. A. G. de Oliveira,, Jan-Christoph Deinert, Paul Chekhonin, Igor Veremchuk, Tobias Kosub, Yurii, Skourski, Fabian Ganss, Denys Makarov, Carmine Ortix

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a strong room temperature nonlinear Hall effect in bismuth thin films, enabling frequency doubling and third harmonic generation, with potential for THz optoelectronic applications.
Contribution
It reveals the first observation of room temperature nonlinear Hall effect in elemental bismuth thin films and explores their nonlinear electrodynamical responses for THz applications.
Findings
Strong room temperature nonlinear Hall effect in Bi films
Efficient third harmonic generation in the THz range
Enhanced nonlinear responses in curved geometries
Abstract
The nonlinear Hall effect (NLHE) with time-reversal symmetry constitutes the appearance of a transverse voltage quadratic in the applied electric field. It is a second-order electronic transport phenomenon that induces frequency doubling and occurs in non-centrosymmetric crystals with large Berry curvature -- an emergent magnetic field encoding the geometric properties of electronic wavefunctions. The design of (opto)electronic devices based on the NLHE is however hindered by the fact that this nonlinear effect typically appears at low temperatures and in complex compounds characterized by Dirac or Weyl electrons. Here, we show a strong room temperature NLHE in the centrosymmetric elemental material bismuth synthesized in the form of technologically relevant polycrystalline thin films. The () surface electrons of this material are equipped with a Berry curvature triple that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Terahertz technology and applications · Gyrotron and Vacuum Electronics Research
