Tunable chiral symmetry breaking in symmetric Weyl materials

ORAL

Abstract

Asymmetric Weyl semimetals, which possess an inherently chiral structure, have different energies and dispersion relations for left- and right-handed fermions. They exhibit certain effects not found in symmetric Weyl semimetals, such as the quantized circular photogalvanic effect and the helical magnetic effect. In this work, we derive the conditions required for breaking chiral symmetry by applying an external field in symmetric Weyl semimetals. We explicitly demonstrate that in certain materials with the Td point group, magnetic fields along low symmetry directions break the symmetry between left- and right-handed fermions; the symmetry breaking can be tuned by changing the direction and magnitude of the magnetic field. In some cases, we find an imbalance between the number of type I left- and right-handed Weyl cones (which is compensated by the number of type II cones of each chirality.)

*This work was supported in part by the U. S. Department of Energy under Awards DE-SC-0017662 (S. K.) and DE-FG02- 88ER40388 (E. J. P.) and by the National Science Foundation under award DMR-1942447 (J. C.). J. C. acknowledges the support of the Flatiron Institute, a division of the Simons Foundation. J. C. and S. K. also acknowledge the support of an OVPR Seed Grant from Stony Brook University.

Presenters

  • Sahal Kaushik

    • State Univ of NY - Stony Brook
    • Stony Brook University

Authors

  • Sahal Kaushik

    • State Univ of NY - Stony Brook
    • Stony Brook University
  • Evan Philip

    • State Univ of NY - Stony Brook
    • Computational Science Initiative, Brookhaven National Laboratory
    • Stony Brook University
  • Jennifer Cano

    • Stony Brook University
    • Stony Brook University, USA
    • Physics and Astronomy, Stony Brook University
    • Flatiron Institute; Stony Brook Univ.
    • Department of Physics, Stonybrook University
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Stony Brook University
    • State Univ of NY - Stony Brook