Direct Visualization of Electronic Liquid Crystal Phases in Correlated Topological Semimetals
Balaji Venkatesan1,2, Syu-You Guan1, Shiang-Bin Chiu2, Jen-Te Chang1, Po-Yuan Yang6, Chih-Chuan Su1, Ming-Wen Chu3, Raman Sankar1, Guoqing Chang5, Cheng-Yi Huang1, Adrian Del Maestro4, Chia-Seng Chang1,2, Tay-Rong Chang6, Hsin Lin1, Ying-Jer Kao2, Tien-Ming Chuang1*
1Institute of Physics, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
2Department of Physics, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
3Center for Condensed Matter Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
4Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, USA
5Division of Physics and Applied Physics, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore
6Department of Physics, National Cheng-Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan
* Presenter:Tien-Ming Chuang, email:chuangtm@gate.sinica.edu.tw
Strongly correlated electron systems, in which various order parameters compete or intertwine with each other, exhibit rich quantum states of matter. Topological materials, which host symmetry protected Dirac or Weyl fermions, however, are mostly weakly correlated. Hence, the search for correlated topological materials has attracted great attention. Here, we report the first direct observation of electronic liquid crystal phases in nonsymmorphic topological semimetals by using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Real-space STM images reveal electronic nanostructures of incommensurate stripes and intense nematic order, which is reminiscent of the “checkerboard” pattern in underdoped cuprates. Quasiparticle scattering interference imaging also reveals linearly dispersive q-vectors, consistent with the calculated topological band structure. We further show the chemical substitution to the half-filled square-net layer plays the key role in the formation of electronic nematicity and also stabilizes unidirectional charge density wave instability towards incommensurate stripe order. Our results herein demonstrate these topological semimetals are strongly correlated and they provide a fertile playground for the study of novel phenomena of correlated Dirac electrons.
Keywords: Electron correlation, Topological semimetals, Scanning Tunneling Microscopy