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Structural spillage: an efficient method to screen amorphous topological materials

ORAL

Abstract

While topological phases of matter are not restricted to crystals, there is no efficient method for predicting which amorphous solids are topological. In order to enable a high-throughput screening of amorphous topological materials, it is desirable to find a computationally efficient quantity, compatible with first-principle calculations. In this work, we introduce the structural spillage, a quantity that predicts the topological state of an unknown amorphous state by comparing it to a known reference crystal. To illustrate its potential, we benchmark it using tight-binding and first-principles calculations on two-dimensional amorphous bismuth and its bilayer, showing a transition between trivial and topological phases. Our work sets the basis to predict topological amorphous solids efficiently, opening up a large material class where to explore topological phenomena.

Presenters

  • Adolfo G Grushin

    Institut Néel (CNRS), CNRS - Neel Institute

Authors

  • Adolfo G Grushin

    Institut Néel (CNRS), CNRS - Neel Institute

  • Paul Corbae

    University of California, Berkeley, University of California, Santa Barbara

  • Daniel Varjas

    Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems

  • Sinead M Griffin

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Materials Science Division and Molecular Foundry, Berkeley Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Materials Sciences Division and Molecular Foundry, LBNL

  • Daniel Muñoz-Segovia

    Donostia International Physics Center