Recently, in collaboration with the group of Prof. Baile Zhang in Nanyang Technological University, the group of physical acoustics in our school has experimentally observed a twofold symmetry-enforced nodal surface in a three-dimensional (3D) chiral acoustic crystal. The research results have been published in《Nature Communications》entitled " Observation of a topological nodal surface and its surface-state arcs in an artificial acoustic crystal" (DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-13258-3). Yang Yihao, postdoctoral fellow in Nanyang Technology University, and Xia Jianping, master in our school are the co-first authors. Prof. Sun Hongxiang in our school, Prof. Zhang Baile and Prof. Chong Yidong in Nanyang Technology University are co-corresponding authors.
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Topological semimetallic materials are the research hotspot in condensed matter physics, optics and acoustics. 3D gapless topological phases can be classified by the dimensionality of the band degeneracies, including zero-dimensional nodal points, one-dimensional nodal lines, and two-dimensional nodal surfaces. Both nodal points and nodal lines have been realized recently in photonics and acoustics. However, a nodal surface has never been observed in any classical-wave system.
In this work, the authors report on the experimental observation of a twofold symmetry-enforced nodal surface in a 3D chiral acoustic crystal. In particular, the demonstrated nodal surface carries a topological charge of 2, constituting the first realization of a higher-dimensional topologically-charged band degeneracy. Using direct acoustic field measurements, the authors observe the projected nodal surface and its Fermi-arc-like surface states and demonstrate topologically-induced robustness of the surface states against disorders. The discovery of a higher-dimensional topologically-charged band degeneracy paves the way toward further explorations of the physics and applications of new topological semimetal phases.
Article link:https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-13258-3.