Evidence of Time-Reversal and Rotational Symmetry Breaking in the Charge Density Wave States in Kagome Superconductors
ORAL
Abstract
The kagome lattice provides a fascinating playground to study geometrical frustration, topology and strong correlations. The newly discovered kagome metals AV3Sb5 (A = K, Rb, Cs) exhibit exotic phases including charge density waves (CDWs) and superconductivity, with debated properties such as time reversal symmetry breaking (TRSB) and six-fold rotational symmetry breaking in the CDW phase. In our study, we perform scanning birefringence and circular dichroism (CD) microscopy on CsV3Sb5. The emergence of opposite CD domains within the same birefringence domain, along with field-induced CD switching, indicate broken time-reversal symmetry. Furthermore, ultrafast pump-probe reflectivity measurements reveal a splitting of charge density wave induced phonon modes in all three birefringence domains. Such a breaking in degeneracy corroborates the six-fold rotation symmetry breaking in the charge ordered phase.
*This work is supported by Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award no. FA955022-1-0410.
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Publication: Xu, Yishuai, et al. "Three-state nematicity and magneto-optical Kerr effect in the charge density waves in kagome superconductors." Nature physics 18.12 (2022): 1470-1475.
Presenters
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Qinwen Deng
- University of Pennsylvania