4.8 Article

Trapped fractional charges at bulk defects in topological insulators

Journal

NATURE
Volume 589, Issue 7842, Pages 376-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-03117-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF) Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI) [EFMA-1641084]
  2. US Office of Naval Research (ONR) Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) [N00014-20-1-2325]
  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  4. ONR Director for Research Early Career Grant [N00014-17-1-2209]
  5. US National Science Foundation [DMR-1351895]

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Research shows that in TCIs, fractional charges can be robustly trapped by disclination defects, indicating higher-order topological structures. The study also reveals a connection between the trapped charge and topological bound states localized at these defects.
Topological crystalline insulators (TCIs) can exhibit unusual, quantized electric phenomena such as fractional electric polarization and boundary-localized fractional charge(1-6). This quantized fractional charge is the generic observable for identification of TCIs that lack clear spectral features(5-7), including ones with higher-order topology(8-11). It has been predicted that fractional charges can also manifest where crystallographic defects disrupt the lattice structure of TCIs, potentially providing a bulk probe of crystalline topology(10,12-14). However, this capability has not yet been confirmed in experiments, given that measurements of charge distributions in TCIs have not been accessible until recently(11). Here we experimentally demonstrate that disclination defects can robustly trap fractional charges in TCI metamaterials, and show that this trapped charge can indicate non-trivial, higher-order crystalline topology even in the absence of any spectral signatures. Furthermore, we uncover a connection between the trapped charge and the existence of topological bound states localized at these defects. We test the robustness of these topological features when the protective crystalline symmetry is broken, and find that a single robust bound state can be localized at each disclination alongside the fractional charge. Our results conclusively show that disclination defects in TCIs can strongly trap fractional charges as well as topological bound states, and demonstrate the primacy of fractional charge as a probe of crystalline topology.

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