Current switching behavior mediated via hinge modes in higher-order topological phases using altermagnets
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 18:30 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Coupling d-wave altermagnets to three-dimensional topological insulators produces controllable hinge modes that enable tunable current switching.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Incorporation of the d_{x^2-z^2}-type AM drives the system into two second-order topological insulator phases hosting distinct types of hinge modes whose localization and propagation direction are controllable by tuning the relative strengths of the altermagnetic exchange orders, enabling a tunable current-switching behavior.
What carries the argument
The low-energy surface Hamiltonian derived from the bulk three-dimensional topological insulator coupled to d-wave altermagnets, together with the dipolar and quadrupolar winding numbers that classify the second-order topology and determine the hinge-mode spectrum.
Load-bearing premise
The low-energy surface theory and the topological invariants remain valid when the altermagnetic exchange terms are added to the bulk Hamiltonian of the three-dimensional topological insulator.
What would settle it
A reversal in the sign or spatial location of the quantized differential conductance along a chosen hinge when the ratio of the two altermagnetic exchange strengths is inverted would directly test the predicted controllability of propagation direction.
Figures
read the original abstract
We propose a theoretical framework to engineer hybrid-order and higher-order topological phases in three-dimensional topological insulators by coupling to $d$-wave altermagnets (AMs). Presence of only $d_{x^2-y^2}$-type AM drives the system into a hybrid-order topological phase where both first-order and second-order topological phases coexist. This phase is characterized by spectral analysis, low-energy surface theory, dipolar and quadrupolar winding numbers, and it's signature is further confirmed by two-terminal differential conductance calculations. Incorporation of the $d_{x^2-z^2}$-type AM drives the system into two second-order topological insulator phases hosting distinct type of hinge modes. These two variants of second-order topological phases are also topologically characterized by spectral analysis, topological invariants, low-energy surface thoery, and transport calculations. Importantly, the localization and direction of propagation of these one-dimensional hinge modes are controllable by tuning the relative strengths of the alermagnetic exchange orders. We utilize this feature to propose a tunable current-switching behaviour mediated via the hinge modes. Our results establish AMs based hybrid structure as a versatile platform for controllable higher-order topology and hinge-mediated device applications.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proposes coupling a three-dimensional topological insulator to d-wave altermagnets to realize hybrid-order and higher-order topological phases. With only d_{x^2-y^2}-type altermagnetic exchange the system enters a phase hosting both first- and second-order topology, diagnosed by spectral analysis, low-energy surface theory, dipolar/quadrupolar winding numbers, and two-terminal conductance. Adding a d_{x^2-z^2} component drives the system into two distinct second-order topological insulator phases whose hinge modes have tunable localization and propagation direction controlled by the relative strength of the two altermagnetic orders; this tunability is used to propose a current-switching device.
Significance. If the low-energy surface theory and winding-number diagnostics remain valid under the momentum-dependent altermagnetic perturbations, the work would provide a concrete route to electrically tunable hinge-mode transport in higher-order topological insulators, with direct implications for mesoscopic device design. The combination of bulk-boundary correspondence, transport calculations, and explicit parameter tuning constitutes a strength of the approach.
major comments (2)
- [low-energy surface theory] Section on low-energy surface theory (following the bulk Hamiltonian with added altermagnetic terms): the standard surface-state construction for a pure 3D TI does not automatically carry over when momentum-dependent, spin-selective exchange terms are introduced. Additional surface mixing or gap-opening contributions linear in k may appear that are not captured by the original low-energy expansion; these would alter the dipolar and quadrupolar winding numbers and therefore the claimed controllability of hinge-mode localization and direction. A explicit re-derivation of the effective surface Hamiltonian including all symmetry-allowed terms up to linear order in k is required to confirm the invariants remain well-defined across the full tuning range of the relative exchange strengths.
- [transport calculations] Transport section (two-terminal differential conductance): the conductance signatures attributed to the hinge modes assume perfect transmission along the hinges without backscattering from the altermagnetic perturbations. If the surface theory is incomplete, the calculated conductance plateaus may not correspond to the claimed hinge-mode propagation directions; explicit comparison of conductance for the two second-order phases at several values of the relative exchange ratio is needed to substantiate the switching behavior.
minor comments (2)
- [abstract] Abstract: 'alermagnetic' should read 'altermagnetic' and 'thoery' should read 'theory'.
- Notation for the two altermagnetic exchange strengths should be introduced once and used consistently in all figures and equations rather than switching between symbols.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and valuable suggestions. We address the major comments point by point below and have made revisions to strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Section on low-energy surface theory (following the bulk Hamiltonian with added altermagnetic terms): the standard surface-state construction for a pure 3D TI does not automatically carry over when momentum-dependent, spin-selective exchange terms are introduced. Additional surface mixing or gap-opening contributions linear in k may appear that are not captured by the original low-energy expansion; these would alter the dipolar and quadrupolar winding numbers and therefore the claimed controllability of hinge-mode localization and direction. A explicit re-derivation of the effective surface Hamiltonian including all symmetry-allowed terms up to linear order in k is required to confirm the invariants remain well-defined across the full tuning range of the relative exchange strengths.
Authors: We appreciate the referee's concern about the applicability of the low-energy surface theory in the presence of momentum-dependent altermagnetic perturbations. In our derivation, we projected the full bulk Hamiltonian, including the altermagnetic exchange terms, onto the surface Dirac states. Due to the symmetry properties of the d-wave altermagnets, no additional linear-in-k gap-opening terms are introduced that would invalidate the topological invariants. To address this explicitly, we have now included a detailed re-derivation of the effective surface Hamiltonian with all symmetry-allowed terms up to linear order in k in the revised manuscript. This confirms that the dipolar and quadrupolar winding numbers remain well-defined and support the tunable hinge-mode properties across the parameter range. revision: yes
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Referee: Transport section (two-terminal differential conductance): the conductance signatures attributed to the hinge modes assume perfect transmission along the hinges without backscattering from the altermagnetic perturbations. If the surface theory is incomplete, the calculated conductance plateaus may not correspond to the claimed hinge-mode propagation directions; explicit comparison of conductance for the two second-order phases at several values of the relative exchange ratio is needed to substantiate the switching behavior.
Authors: We thank the referee for this suggestion to strengthen the transport analysis. While our original calculations already demonstrate the conductance signatures consistent with the hinge modes, we agree that explicit comparisons at multiple exchange ratios would be beneficial. In the revised manuscript, we have added conductance plots for several values of the relative strength between the d_{x^2-y^2} and d_{x^2-z^2} components. These show clear differences in the plateau values and transmission directions corresponding to the two distinct second-order phases. Regarding potential backscattering, the topological protection from the bulk-boundary correspondence ensures robust hinge-mode propagation without backscattering in the ideal case considered; we have clarified this in the text. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; topological invariants computed independently from bulk model and confirmed by transport
full rationale
The paper starts from a 3D TI bulk Hamiltonian, augments it with explicit d-wave altermagnetic exchange terms, derives the low-energy surface theory, evaluates dipolar and quadrupolar winding numbers directly on that surface Hamiltonian, and then performs separate spectral and two-terminal conductance calculations to exhibit hinge-mode localization and current switching. These steps are linked by explicit model construction and numerical evaluation rather than by re-using a fitted parameter as a prediction or by reducing the central claim to a self-citation. The relative altermagnetic strengths function as external tuning knobs whose effects are computed, not presupposed. No load-bearing self-citation, self-definitional loop, or ansatz smuggling appears in the derivation chain.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- relative strength of altermagnetic exchange orders
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The low-energy surface theory derived from the bulk Hamiltonian remains topologically valid after addition of the altermagnetic terms.
Reference graph
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