Back to Search Start Over

Observation of the nonlinear Hall effect under time-reversal-symmetric conditions

Authors :
Ma, Qiong
Xu, Su-Yang
Shen, Huitao
MacNeill, David
Fatemi, Valla
Chang, Tay-Rong
Mier Valdivia, Andrés M.
Wu, Sanfeng
Du, Zongzheng
Hsu, Chuang-Han
Fang, Shiang
Gibson, Quinn D.
Watanabe, Kenji
Taniguchi, Takashi
Cava, Robert J.
Kaxiras, Efthimios
Lu, Hai-Zhou
Lin, Hsin
Fu, Liang
Gedik, Nuh
Jarillo-Herrero, Pablo
Source :
Nature; January 2019, Vol. 565 Issue: 7739 p337-342, 6p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The electrical Hall effect is the production, upon the application of an electric field, of a transverse voltage under an out-of-plane magnetic field. Studies of the Hall effect have led to important breakthroughs, including the discoveries of Berry curvature and topological Chern invariants1,2. The internal magnetization of magnets means that the electrical Hall effect can occur in the absence of an external magnetic field2; this ‘anomalous’ Hall effect is important for the study of quantum magnets2–7. The electrical Hall effect has rarely been studied in non-magnetic materials without external magnetic fields, owing to the constraint of time-reversal symmetry. However, only in the linear response regime—when the Hall voltage is linearly proportional to the external electric field—does the Hall effect identically vanish as a result of time-reversal symmetry; the Hall effect in the nonlinear response regime is not subject to such symmetry constraints8–10. Here we report observations of the nonlinear Hall effect10in electrical transport in bilayers of the non-magnetic quantum material WTe2under time-reversal-symmetric conditions. We show that an electric current in bilayer WTe2leads to a nonlinear Hall voltage in the absence of a magnetic field. The properties of this nonlinear Hall effect are distinct from those of the anomalous Hall effect in metals: the nonlinear Hall effect results in a quadratic, rather than linear, current–voltage characteristic and, in contrast to the anomalous Hall effect, the nonlinear Hall effect results in a much larger transverse than longitudinal voltage response, leading to a nonlinear Hall angle (the angle between the total voltage response and the applied electric field) of nearly 90 degrees. We further show that the nonlinear Hall effect provides a direct measure of the dipole moment10of the Berry curvature, which arises from layer-polarized Dirac fermions in bilayer WTe2. Our results demonstrate a new type of Hall effect and provide a way of detecting Berry curvature in non-magnetic quantum materials.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
565
Issue :
7739
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs47596586
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0807-6