4.8 Article

Acoustic higher-order topological insulator on a kagome lattice

Journal

NATURE MATERIALS
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 108-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41563-018-0251-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education [MOE2015-T2-1-070, MOE2015-T2-2-008, MOE2016-T3-1-006, RG174/16 (S)]
  2. Young Thousand Talent Plan, China
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61801426]

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Higher-order topological insulators(1-5) are a family of recently predicted topological phases of matter that obey an extended topological bulk-boundary correspondence principle. For example, a two-dimensional (2D) second-order topological insulator does not exhibit gapless one-dimensional (1D) topological edge states, like a standard 2D topological insulator, but instead has topologically protected zero-dimensional (0D) corner states. The first prediction of a second-order topological insulator(1), based on quantized quadrupole polarization, was demonstrated in classical mechanical(6) and electromagnetic(7,8) metamaterials. Here we experimentally realize a second-order topological insulator in an acoustic metamaterial, based on a 'breathing' kagome lattice(9) that has zero quadrupole polarization but a non-trivial bulk topology characterized by quantized Wannier centres(2,9,10). Unlike previous higher-order topological insulator realizations, the corner states depend not only on the bulk topology but also on the corner shape; we show experimentally that they exist at acute-angled corners of the kagome lattice, but not at obtuse-angled corners. This shape dependence allows corner states to act as topologically protected but reconfigurable local resonances.

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