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Unconventional chiral charge order in kagome superconductor KV3Sb5.

Yu-Xiao JiangJia-Xin YinM Michael DennerNana ShumiyaBrenden R OrtizGang XuZurab GuguchiaJunyi HeMd Shafayat HossainXiaoxiong LiuJacob RuffLinus KautzschSongtian S ZhangGuoqing ChangIlya BelopolskiQi ZhangTyler A CochranDaniel MulterMaksim LitskevichZi-Jia ChengXian P YangZiqiang WangRonny ThomaleTitus NeupertStephen D WilsonM Zahid Hasan
Published in: Nature materials (2021)
Intertwining quantum order and non-trivial topology is at the frontier of condensed matter physics1-4. A charge-density-wave-like order with orbital currents has been proposed for achieving the quantum anomalous Hall effect5,6 in topological materials and for the hidden phase in cuprate high-temperature superconductors7,8. However, the experimental realization of such an order is challenging. Here we use high-resolution scanning tunnelling microscopy to discover an unconventional chiral charge order in a kagome material, KV3Sb5, with both a topological band structure and a superconducting ground state. Through both topography and spectroscopic imaging, we observe a robust 2 × 2 superlattice. Spectroscopically, an energy gap opens at the Fermi level, across which the 2 × 2 charge modulation exhibits an intensity reversal in real space, signalling charge ordering. At the impurity-pinning-free region, the strength of intrinsic charge modulations further exhibits chiral anisotropy with unusual magnetic field response. Theoretical analysis of our experiments suggests a tantalizing unconventional chiral charge density wave in the frustrated kagome lattice, which can not only lead to a large anomalous Hall effect with orbital magnetism, but also be a precursor of unconventional superconductivity.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • solar cells
  • ionic liquid
  • capillary electrophoresis
  • molecular dynamics
  • mass spectrometry
  • computed tomography
  • single molecule
  • high intensity
  • energy transfer
  • electron microscopy