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Dive into the research topics where B. Q. Lv is active.

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Featured researches published by B. Q. Lv.


Physical Review D | 2015

Experimental discovery of Weyl semimetal TaAs

B. Q. Lv; Hongming Weng; B. B. Fu; Xiongfei Wang; H. Miao; J. Ma; Pierre Richard; X. C. Huang; Lingxiao Zhao; Guo-Ming Chen; Zhong Fang; Xi Dai; Tian Qian; H. Ding

Weyl semimetals are a class of materials that can be regarded as three-dimensional analogs of graphene breaking time reversal or inversion symmetry. Electrons in a Weyl semimetal behave as Weyl fermions, which have many exotic properties, such as chiral anomaly and magnetic monopoles in the crystal momentum space. The surface state of a Weyl semimetal displays pairs of entangled Fermi arcs at two opposite surfaces. However, the existence of Weyl semimetals has not yet been proved experimentally. Here we report the experimental realization of a Weyl semimetal in TaAs by observing Fermi arcs formed by its surface states using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. Our first-principles calculations, matching remarkably well with the experimental results, further confirm that TaAs is a Weyl semimetal.


Nature Physics | 2015

Observation of Weyl nodes in TaAs

B. Q. Lv; N. Xu; Hongming Weng; J. Ma; P. Richard; X. C. Huang; Lin Zhao; G. Chen; C. E. Matt; F. Bisti; V. N. Strocov; J. Mesot; Zhong Fang; Xi Dai; T. Qian; M. Shi; H. Ding

Experiments show that TaAs is a three-dimensional topological Weyl semimetal. In 1929, H. Weyl proposed that the massless solution of the Dirac equation represents a pair of a new type of particles, the so-called Weyl fermions1. However, their existence in particle physics remains elusive after more than eight decades. Recently, significant advances in both topological insulators and topological semimetals have provided an alternative way to realize Weyl fermions in condensed matter, as an emergent phenomenon: when two non-degenerate bands in the three-dimensional momentum space cross in the vicinity of the Fermi energy (called Weyl nodes), the low-energy excitations behave exactly as Weyl fermions. Here we report the direct observation in TaAs of the long-sought-after Weyl nodes by performing bulk-sensitive soft X-ray angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements. The projected locations at the nodes on the (001) surface match well to the Fermi arcs, providing undisputable experimental evidence for the existence of Weyl fermionic quasiparticles in TaAs.


Nature Communications | 2016

Observation of Weyl nodes and Fermi arcs in tantalum phosphide.

N. Xu; Hongming Weng; B. Q. Lv; C. E. Matt; J. Park; F. Bisti; V. N. Strocov; D. Gawryluk; E. Pomjakushina; K. Conder; N. C. Plumb; M. Radovic; G. Autès; Oleg V. Yazyev; Zhong Fang; X. Dai; T. Qian; J. Mesot; H. Ding; M. Shi

A Weyl semimetal possesses spin-polarized band-crossings, called Weyl nodes, connected by topological surface arcs. The low-energy excitations near the crossing points behave the same as massless Weyl fermions, leading to exotic properties like chiral anomaly. To have the transport properties dominated by Weyl fermions, Weyl nodes need to locate nearly at the chemical potential and enclosed by pairs of individual Fermi surfaces with non-zero Fermi Chern numbers. Combining angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and first-principles calculation, here we show that TaP is a Weyl semimetal with only a single type of Weyl fermions, topologically distinguished from TaAs where two types of Weyl fermions contribute to the low-energy physical properties. The simple Weyl fermions in TaP are not only of fundamental interests but also of great potential for future applications. Fermi arcs on the Ta-terminated surface are observed, which appear in a different pattern from that on the As-termination in TaAs and NbAs.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Observation of Fermi-Arc Spin Texture in TaAs

B. Q. Lv; Stefan Muff; T. Qian; Zhida Song; Simin Nie; N. Xu; P. Richard; C. E. Matt; N. C. Plumb; Lin Zhao; G. Chen; Zhong Fang; Xi Dai; J. H. Dil; J. Mesot; M. Shi; Hongming Weng; H. Ding

We have investigated the spin texture of surface Fermi arcs in the recently discovered Weyl semimetal TaAs using spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. The experimental results demonstrate that the Fermi arcs are spin polarized. The measured spin texture fulfills the requirement of mirror and time-reversal symmetries and is well reproduced by our first-principles calculations, which gives strong evidence for the topologically nontrivial Weyl semimetal state in TaAs. The consistency between the experimental and calculated results further confirms the distribution of chirality of the Weyl nodes determined by first-principles calculations.


Science Advances | 2017

Experimental evidence of hourglass fermion in the candidate nonsymmorphic topological insulator KHgSb

J. Ma; Changjiang Yi; B. Q. Lv; Zhijun Wang; Simin Nie; Le Wang; Lingyuan Kong; Yaobo Huang; Pierre Richard; Peng Zhang; Koichiro Yaji; Kenta Kuroda; Shik Shin; Hongming Weng; Bogdan Andrei Bernevig; Youguo Shi; Tian Qian; H. Ding

Topological insulators (TIs) host novel states of quantum matter, distinguished from trivial insulators by the presence of nontrivial conducting boundary states connecting the valence and conduction bulk bands. Up to date, all the TIs discovered experimentally rely on the presence of either time reversal or symmorphic mirror symmetry to protect massless Dirac-like boundary states. Very recently, it has been theoretically proposed that several materials are a new type of TIs protected by nonsymmorphic symmetry, where glide-mirror can protect novel exotic surface fermions with hourglass-shaped dispersion. However, an experimental confirmation of such new nonsymmorphic TI (NSTI) is still missing. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we reveal that such hourglass topology exists on the (010) surface of crystalline KHgSb while the (001) surface has no boundary state, which is fully consistent with first-principles calculations. We thus experimentally demonstrate that KHgSb is a NSTI hosting hourglass fermions. By expanding the classification of topological insulators, this discovery opens a new direction in the research of nonsymmorphic topological properties of materials.Photoemission established KHgSb as a nonsymmorphic topological insulator, which hosts hourglass-shaped surface states. Topological insulators (TIs) host novel states of quantum matter characterized by nontrivial conducting boundary states connecting valence and conduction bulk bands. All TIs discovered experimentally so far rely on either time-reversal or mirror crystal symmorphic symmetry to protect massless Dirac-like boundary states. Several materials were recently proposed to be TIs with nonsymmorphic symmetry, where a glide mirror protects exotic surface fermions with hourglass-shaped dispersion. However, an experimental confirmation of this new fermion is missing. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we provide experimental evidence of hourglass fermions on the (010) surface of crystalline KHgSb, whereas the (001) surface has no boundary state, in agreement with first-principles calculations. Our study will stimulate further research activities of topological properties of nonsymmorphic materials.


Nature Physics | 2018

Three-component fermions with surface Fermi arcs in tungsten carbide

J. Ma; J.-B. He; Y.-F. Xu; B. Q. Lv; D. Chen; W.-L. Zhu; S. Zhang; L.-Y. Kong; X. Gao; L.-Y. Rong; Yaobo Huang; Pierre Richard; C.-Y. Xi; E. S. Choi; Yan Shao; Yeliang Wang; H. J. Gao; Xi Dai; Chen Fang; Hongming Weng; Genfu Chen; Tian Qian; H. Ding

Topological Dirac and Weyl semimetals not only host quasiparticles analogous to the elementary fermionic particles in high-energy physics, but also have a non-trivial band topology manifested by gapless surface states, which induce exotic surface Fermi arcs1,2. Recent advances suggest new types of topological semimetal, in which spatial symmetries protect gapless electronic excitations without high-energy analogues3–11. Here, using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we observe triply degenerate nodal points near the Fermi level of tungsten carbide with space group


Physical Review B | 2015

Observation of two distinct d x z / d y z band splittings in FeSe

P. Zhang; T. Qian; P. Richard; X. P. Wang; H. Miao; B. Q. Lv; B. B. Fu; Thomas Wolf; C. Meingast; X. X. Wu; Zhongwu Wang; Jiuning Hu; H. Ding


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Distinct Evolutions of Weyl Fermion Quasiparticles and Fermi Arcs with Bulk Band Topology in Weyl Semimetals

N. Xu; G. Autès; C. E. Matt; B. Q. Lv; M. Y. Yao; F. Bisti; V. N. Strocov; Dariusz Gawryluk; E. Pomjakushina; K. Conder; N. C. Plumb; M. Radovic; T. Qian; Oleg V. Yazyev; J. Mesot; H. Ding; M. Shi

P\bar{6}m2


Physical Review B | 2016

Orbital-differentiated coherence-incoherence crossover identified by photoemission spectroscopy in LiFeAs

H. Miao; Z. P. Yin; S. F. Wu; Jian Li; J. Ma; B. Q. Lv; X. P. Wang; T. Qian; P. Richard; Lingyi Xing; X. C. Wang; Changqing Jin; Kristjan Haule; Gabriel Kotliar; H. Ding


Physical Review Letters | 2016

NaFe0.56Cu0.44As: A Pnictide Insulating Phase Induced by On-Site Coulomb Interaction

C. E. Matt; N. Xu; B. Q. Lv; Junzhang Ma; F. Bisti; J. T. Park; T. Shang; Chongde Cao; Yu Song; Andriy H. Nevidomskyy; Pengcheng Dai; L. Patthey; Nicholas C. Plumb; M. Radovic; J. Mesot; M. Shi

P6̄m2 (no. 187), in which the low-energy quasiparticles are described as three-component fermions distinct from Dirac and Weyl fermions. We further observe topological surface states, whose constant-energy contours constitute pairs of ‘Fermi arcs’ connecting to the surface projections of the triply degenerate nodal points, proving the non-trivial topology of the newly identified semimetal state.Triply degenerate electronic structure—three-component fermions—protected by crystal symmetries is observed in tungsten carbide. The observed Fermi arcs associated with the surface states provide evidence of the non-trivial topology of the states.

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H. Ding

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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T. Qian

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hongming Weng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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J. Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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M. Shi

Paul Scherrer Institute

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Tian Qian

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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B. B. Fu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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N. Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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C. E. Matt

Paul Scherrer Institute

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