Observation of symmetry-protected zero modes in topolectrical circuits
ORAL
Abstract
Higher-order topological insulators are a new class of topological phases of matter, originally conceived for electrons in solids. It has been suggested that the ZN Berry phase (Berry phase quantized into 2π/N) is a useful tool to characterize the symmetry-protected topological states, whereas the experimental evidence is still elusive. Recently, topolectrical circuits have emerged as a simple yet very powerful platform for studying topological physics that are challenging to realize in condensed-matter systems. Here, we present an experimental observation of second-order corner states characterized by the Z3 Berry phase in topolectrical circuits. We demonstrate theoretically and experimentally that the localized second-order topological states are protected by a generalized chiral symmetry of tripartite lattices, and they are pinned to “zero energy.” By introducing extra capacitors within sublattices in the circuit, we are able to examine the robustness of the zero modes against both chiral-symmetry-conserving and breaking disturbances. Our work paves the way for testing exotic topological band theory by electrical-circuit experiments.
–
Presenters
-
Huanhuan Yang
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
Authors
-
Huanhuan Yang
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
-
Zhixiong Li
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
-
Yuanyuan Liu
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
-
Yunshan Cao
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
-
Peng Yan
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China