The Lifshitz transition from type-I to type-II Weyl states is equivalent to a black hole horizon, featuring a Dirac-line Fermi surface with nontrivial topological invariant and critical chiral anomaly.
Observation of the Type-II Weyl Semimetal Phase in MoTe2
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abstract
Topological Weyl semimetal (TWS), a new state of quantum matter, has sparked enormous research interest recently. Possessing unique Weyl fermions in the bulk and Fermi arcs on the surface, TWSs offer a rare platform for realizing many exotic physical phenomena. TWSs can be classified into type-I that respect Lorentz symmetry and type-II that do not. Here, we directly visualize the electronic structure of MoTe2, a recently proposed type-II TWS. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), we unravel the unique surface Fermi arcs, in good agreement with our ab-initio calculations. From spin-resolved ARPES measurements, we demonstrate the non-degenerate spin-texture of surface Fermi-arcs, thereby proving their non-trivial topological nature. Our work not only lead to new understandings of the unusual properties discovered in this family of compounds, but also allow for the further exploration of exotic properties and practical applications of type-II TWSs, as well as the interplay between superconductivity (MoTe2 was discovered to be superconducting recently) and their topological order.
fields
cond-mat.mes-hall 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Dirac-Line Criticality and Emergent Horizons in Weyl Lifshitz Transitions
The Lifshitz transition from type-I to type-II Weyl states is equivalent to a black hole horizon, featuring a Dirac-line Fermi surface with nontrivial topological invariant and critical chiral anomaly.