Broken symmetries associated with a Kagome chiral charge order
Zi-Jia Cheng, Md Shafayat Hossain, Qi Zhang, Sen Shao, Jinjin Liu,, Yilin Zhao, Mohammad Yahyavi, Yu-Xiao Jiang, Jia-Xin Yin, Xian Yang, Yongkai, Li, Tyler A. Cochran, Maksim Litskevich, Byunghoon Kim, Junyi Zhang, Yugui, Yao, Luis Balicas, Zhiwei Wang, Guoqing Chang

TL;DR
This study uncovers the broken symmetries in a chiral charge density wave in Kagome KV3Sb5 using second-order optical response, revealing its chiral nature and demonstrating the nonlinear photogalvanic effect as a sensitive detection method.
Contribution
It provides direct experimental evidence of broken inversion and mirror symmetries in the chiral charge order of KV3Sb5, supported by theoretical analysis.
Findings
Detection of helicity-dependent photocurrent linked to charge order
Evidence of broken inversion and mirror symmetries
Absence of circular photogalvanic effect constrains symmetry group
Abstract
Chirality or handedness manifests in all fields of science, ranging from cell biology, molecular interaction, and catalysis to different branches of physics. In condensed matter physics, chirality is intrinsic to enigmatic quantum phases, such as chiral charge density waves and chiral superconductivity. Here, the underlying chiral response is subtle and leads to broken symmetries in the ground state. Detection of subtle broken symmetries is the key to understand these quantum states but they are extremely challenging to expose leading to debate and controversy. Here, using second-order optical response, we uncover the broken symmetries of a chiral charge density wave in the Kagome lattice KV3Sb5, revealing the relevant broken symmetries of its charge order. KV3Sb5 undergoes a phase transition to a charge-ordered state at low temperatures. Our polarization-dependent mid-infrared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular spectroscopy and chirality · Advanced Algebra and Geometry
