Topological
quantum chemistry.
Barry Bradlyn
Princeton
University
The interplay of
topology and geometry has been - and continues to be - a rich area of study for
condensed matter physics. Recently, we have realized that spatial symmetries
allow for the stabilization of topological phases much more exotic than those
that can be found with time-reversal symmetry alone; however, a complete theory
is still missing. In this talk, I will examine topological metals and
insulators stabilized by any of the 230 crystal symmetry groups. I will develop
a topological band theory that relates the symmetry properties of real space
Wannier functions to the global topology of energy bands in momentum space.
From this I will derive a predictive classification of topological crystalline
phases, well suited for both predictions and ab-initio materials searches.
Focusing first on insulating phases, I will show how our topological band
theory sheds new light on old topological insulators, before moving on to
present a new slew of topological insulators that we have predicted with our
method. Additionally, I will show how non-symmorphic
crystal symmetries can protect topological insulators with novel surface
states, through symmetry constraints on the band structure; this includes a new
topological phase whose surface spectrum consists of a single four-fold
degenerate Dirac fermion. Moving on to topological semimetals, I will show how
these same non-symmorphic symmetries require the
existence of gapless free-fermion excitations unlike any found in high-energy
physics. This includes the first natural generalization of the Weyl fermion,
described by a kS Hamiltonian.