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Optical detection and manipulation of spontaneous gyrotropic electronic order in a transition-metal dichalcogenide semimetal

Authors :
Xu, Su-Yang
Ma, Qiong
Gao, Yang
Kogar, Anshul
Zong, Guo
Valdivia, Andres M. Mier
Dinh, Thao H.
Huang, Shin-Ming
Singh, Bahadur
Hsu, Chuang-Han
Chang, Tay-Rong
Ruff, Jacob P. C.
Watanabe, Kenji
Taniguchi, Takashi
Lin, Hsin
Karapetrov, Goran
Xiao, Di
Jarillo-Herrero, Pablo
Gedik, Nuh
Source :
Nature 578, 545 (2020)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The observation of chirality is ubiquitous in nature. Contrary to intuition, the population of opposite chiralities is surprisingly asymmetric at fundamental levels. Examples range from parity violation in the subatomic weak force to the homochirality in essential biomolecules. The ability to achieve chirality-selective synthesis (chiral induction) is of great importance in stereochemistry, molecular biology and pharmacology. In condensed matter physics, a crystalline electronic system is geometrically chiral when it lacks any mirror plane, space inversion center or roto-inversion axis. Typically, the geometrical chirality is predefined by a material's chiral lattice structure, which is fixed upon the formation of the crystal. By contrast, a particularly unconventional scenario is the gyrotropic order, where chirality spontaneously emerges across a phase transition as the electron system breaks the relevant symmetries of an originally achiral lattice. Such a gyrotropic order, proposed as the quantum analogue of the cholesteric liquid crystals, has attracted significant interest. However, to date, a clear observation and manipulation of the gyrotropic order remain challenging. We report the realization of optical chiral induction and the observation of a gyrotropically ordered phase in the transition-metal dichalcogenide semimetal $1T$-TiSe$_2$. We show that shining mid-infrared circularly polarized light near the critical temperature leads to the preferential formation of one chiral domain. As a result, we are able to observe an out-of-plane circular photogalvanic current, whose direction depends on the optical induction. Our study provides compelling evidence for the spontaneous emergence of chirality in the correlated semimetal TiSe$_2$. Such chiral induction provides a new way of optical control over novel orders in quantum materials.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature 578, 545 (2020)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1910.14121
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2011-8