Observation of the topological surface state in the nonsymmorphic topological insulator KHgSb

ORAL

Abstract

Topological insulators represent unusual topological quantum states, typically with gapped bulk band structurebut gapless surface Dirac fermions protected by time-reversal symmetry. Recently, a distinct kind of topologicalinsulator resulting from nonsymmorphic crystalline symmetry was proposed in the KHgX (X = As, Sb, Bi) compounds. Unlike regular topological crystalline insulators, the nonsymmorphic glide-reflection symmetry in KHgX guarantees the appearance of an exotic surface fermionwith hourglass shape dispersion (where two pairs of branches switch their partners) residing on its (010) side surface, contrasting to the usual two-dimensional Dirac fermion form. Here, by using high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we systematically investigate the electronic structures of KHgSb on both (001) and (010) surfaces and reveal the unique in-gap surface states on the (010) surface with delicate dispersion consistent with the “hourglass Fermion” recently proposed. Our experiment strongly supports that KHgSb is a nonsymmorphic topological crystalline insulator with hourglass fermions, which serves as an important step to the discovery of unique topological quantum materials and exotic fermions protected by nonsymmorphic crystalline symmetry.

Presenters

  • Aiji Liang

    School of Physical Science and Technology , Shanghaitech University

Authors

  • Aiji Liang

    School of Physical Science and Technology , Shanghaitech University

  • Juan Jiang

    ShanghaiTech University, Advanced Light Source, School of Physical Science and Technology , Shanghaitech University

  • Zhongkai Liu

    ShanghaiTech University, School of Physical Science and Technology , Shanghaitech University, School of Physical Science and Technology, ShanghaiTech University

  • Yulin Chen

    Physics department, University of Oxford, University of Oxford, Oxford Unv., physics, university of oxford, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, Condensed Matter Physics, University of Oxford