Amorphous topological insulators constructed from random point sets

ORAL

Abstract

Mechanical lattices have recently been found to exhibit topological structure in their phononic excitations, giving rise to protected uni-directional edge modes. In these cases, however, as well as in other topological metamaterials, the underlying structure was finely tuned, be it through periodicity, quasi-periodicity or isostaticity. Here we show that amorphous Chern insulators can be readily constructed from arbitrary underlying structures, including hyperuniform, jammed, quasi-crystalline, and uniformly random point sets. While our findings apply to mechanical and electronic systems alike, we focus on networks of interacting gyroscopes as a model system. Local decorations control the topology of the vibrational spectrum, endowing amorphous structures with protected edge modes---with a chirality of choice. Using a real-space generalization of the Chern number, we investigate the topology of our structures numerically, analytically and experimentally. The robustness of our approach enables the topological design and self-assembly of non-crystalline topological metamaterials on the micro and macro scale.

Presenters

  • Noah Mitchell

    James Franck Institute, University of Chicago

Authors

  • Noah Mitchell

    James Franck Institute, University of Chicago

  • Lisa Nash

    James Franck Institute, University of Chicago

  • Daniel Hexner

    James Franck Institute, University of Chicago, Univ of Chicago, The James Franck Institute, The University of Chicago

  • Ari Turner

    Physics, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Technion

  • William Irvine

    University of Chicago, James Franck Institute, Enrico Fermi Institute, University of Chicago