LIGHT-ENHANCED NONLINEAR HALL EFFECT

Light-enhanced nonlinear Hall effect

Light-enhanced nonlinear Hall effect

Blog Article

Abstract The Hall response can be dramatically different from its quantized value in materials with broken inversion symmetry.This stems from the leading Hall contribution beyond the linear order, known as the Berry curvature dipole (BCD).While the BCD is in principle always present, it is typically very small Kratom Powder outside of a narrow window close to a topological transition and is thus experimentally elusive without careful tuning of external fields, temperature, or impurities.

We transcend this challenge by devising optical driving and quench protocols that enable practical and direct access to Wooden Toy large BCD.Varying the amplitude of an incident circularly polarized laser drives a topological transition between normal and Chern insulator phases, and importantly allows the precise unlocking of nonlinear Hall currents comparable to or larger than the linear Hall contributions.This strong BCD engineering is even more versatile with our two-parameter quench protocol, as demonstrated in our experimental proposal.

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