Non-Hermitian Origin of Wannier Localizability and Detachable Topological Boundary States

ORAL

Abstract

While topology can impose obstructions to exponentially localized Wannier functions, certain topological insulators are exempt from such Wannier obstructions. The absence of the Wannier obstructions can further accompany topological boundary states that are detachable from the bulk bands. Here, we elucidate a close connection between these detachable topological boundary states and non-Hermitian topology. Identifying topological boundary states as non-Hermitian topology, we demonstrate that intrinsic non-Hermitian topology leads to the inevitable spectral flow. By contrast, we show that extrinsic non-Hermitian topology underlies the detachment of topological boundary states and clarify anti-Hermitian topology of the detached boundary states. Based on this connection and K-theory, we complete the tenfold classification of Wannier localizability and detachable topological boundary states [1,2].

[1] D. Nakamura, K. Shiozaki, K. Shimomura, M. Sato, and K. Kawabata, arXiv:2407.09458 (2024).

[2] K. Shiozaki, D. Nakamura, K. Shimomura, M. Sato, and K. Kawabata, arXiv:2407.18273 (2024).

*D.N., K. Shiozaki, K. Shimomura, and M.S. are supported by JST CREST Grant No. JPMJCR19T2. D.N. is supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant No. 24K22857. K. Shiozaki is supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Nos. 22H05118 and 23H01097. K. Shimomura is supported by JST SPRING, Grant No. JPMJSP2110. M.S. is supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant No. 24K00569. K.K. is supported by MEXT KAKENHI Grant-in-Aid for Transformative Research Areas A "Extreme Universe" No. 24H00945.

Publication: [1] D. Nakamura, K. Shiozaki, K. Shimomura, M. Sato, and K. Kawabata, arXiv:2407.09458 (2024).
[2] K. Shiozaki, D. Nakamura, K. Shimomura, M. Sato, and K. Kawabata, arXiv:2407.18273 (2024).

Presenters

  • Daichi Nakamura

    • ISSP, Univ. of Tokyo
    • The Institute for Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo

Authors

  • Daichi Nakamura

    • ISSP, Univ. of Tokyo
    • The Institute for Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo
  • Ken Shiozaki

    • Kyoto Univ
  • Kenji Shimomura

    • Kyoto Univ
  • Masatoshi Sato

    • Kyoto University
  • Kohei Kawabata

    • Univ of Tokyo