Field-unmasked quantum geometry in a symmetry-forbidden photocurrent
Bumseop Kim, Aaron M. Burger, Zhenbang Dai, Sayed Ali Akbar Ghorashi, Adam Abirou, Md Al Helal, Vladmir M. Fridkin, Jonathan E. Spanier, and Andrew M. Rappe

TL;DR
This study reveals how defect-induced local magnetic ordering under magnetic fields can unmask hidden quantum geometric effects in chiral materials, enabling forbidden photocurrents to be observed.
Contribution
It demonstrates that defect-enabled, field-selected symmetry breaking activates latent quantum-geometric responses in a symmetry-forbidden photocurrent in chiral quantum materials.
Findings
Observed a longitudinal photocurrent exceeding expectations in a symmetry-forbidden material.
Identified defect-induced magnetic moments as the mechanism lowering effective symmetry.
Correlated photocurrent channels with Berry curvature and quantum metric regions.
Abstract
Frequency- and polarization-resolved photocurrents provide a sensitive probe of hidden symmetry and band geometry in quantum materials. Here we study a chiral cubic sillenite whose global crystal symmetry forbids a longitudinal odd-in-B magneto-photocurrent in the Voigt geometry. Nevertheless, we observe a pronounced longitudinal response across the visible range that is predominantly linear in magnetic field, persists below the band gap, and exhibits strong helicity selectivity, with the circular channel exceeding the linear one and reversing sign upon switching light helicity. We resolve this apparent contradiction by identifying defect-enabled, field-selected spin ordering as the mechanism that lowers the effective magnetic symmetry without altering the global crystal structure. First-principles calculations show that O vacancies generate in-gap bound states and localized magnetic…
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