Chenglong Zhang
Peking University
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Featured researches published by Chenglong Zhang.
Science | 2015
Su-Yang Xu; Ilya Belopolski; Nasser Alidoust; Madhab Neupane; Guang Bian; Chenglong Zhang; Raman Sankar; Guoqing Chang; Zhujun Yuan; Chi-Cheng Lee; Shin-Ming Huang; Hao Zheng; Ma J; Daniel S. Sanchez; Baokai Wang; A. Bansil; F. C. Chou; Pavel Shibayev; Hsin Lin; Shuang Jia; M. Z. Hasan
Weyl physics emerges in the laboratory Weyl fermions—massless particles with half-integer spin—were once mistakenly thought to describe neutrinos. Although not yet observed among elementary particles, Weyl fermions may exist as collective excitations in so-called Weyl semimetals. These materials have an unusual band structure in which the linearly dispersing valence and conduction bands meet at discrete “Weyl points.” Xu et al. used photoemission spectroscopy to identify TaAs as a Weyl semimetal capable of hosting Weyl fermions. In a complementary study, Lu et al. detected the characteristic Weyl points in a photonic crystal. The observation of Weyl physics may enable the discovery of exotic fundamental phenomena. Science, this issue p. 613 and 622 Angle-resolved photoemission is used to detect the topological surface states and bulk dispersion of the compound tantalum arsenide. [Also see Report by Lu et al.] A Weyl semimetal is a new state of matter that hosts Weyl fermions as emergent quasiparticles and admits a topological classification that protects Fermi arc surface states on the boundary of a bulk sample. This unusual electronic structure has deep analogies with particle physics and leads to unique topological properties. We report the experimental discovery of a Weyl semimetal, tantalum arsenide (TaAs). Using photoemission spectroscopy, we directly observe Fermi arcs on the surface, as well as the Weyl fermion cones and Weyl nodes in the bulk of TaAs single crystals. We find that Fermi arcs terminate on the Weyl fermion nodes, consistent with their topological character. Our work opens the field for the experimental study of Weyl fermions in physics and materials science.
Nature Communications | 2015
Shin-Ming Huang; Su-Yang Xu; Ilya Belopolski; Chi-Cheng Lee; Guoqing Chang; Baokai Wang; Nasser Alidoust; Guang Bian; Madhab Neupane; Chenglong Zhang; Shuang Jia; A. Bansil; Hsin Lin; M. Zahid Hasan
The recent discoveries of Dirac fermions in graphene and on the surface of topological insulators have ignited worldwide interest in physics and materials science. A Weyl semimetal is an unusual crystal where electrons also behave as massless quasi-particles but interestingly they are not Dirac fermions. These massless particles, Weyl fermions, were originally considered in massless quantum electrodynamics but have not been observed as a fundamental particle in nature. A Weyl semimetal provides a condensed matter realization of Weyl fermions, leading to unique transport properties with novel device applications. Here, we THEORETICALLY identify the first Weyl semimetal in a class of stoichiometric materials (TaAs, NbAs, NbP, TaP), which break crystalline inversion symmetry, including TaAs, TaP, NbAs and NbP. Our first-principles calculation-based predictions on TaAs reveal the spin-polarized Weyl cones and Fermi arc surface states in this compound. We also observe pairs of Weyl points with the same chiral charge which project onto the same point in the surface Brillouin zone, giving rise to multiple Fermi arcs connecting to a given Weyl point. Our results show that TaAs is the first topological semimetal identified which does not depend on fine-tuning of chemical composition or magnetic order, greatly facilitating an exploration of Weyl physics in real materials. (Note added: This theoretical prediction of November 2014 (see paper in Nature Communications) was the basis for the first experimental discovery of Weyl Fermions and topological Fermi arcs in TaAs recently published in Science (2015) at this http URL)Weyl fermions are massless chiral fermions that play an important role in quantum field theory but have never been observed as fundamental particles. A Weyl semimetal is an unusual crystal that hosts Weyl fermions as quasiparticle excitations and features Fermi arcs on its surface. Such a semimetal not only provides a condensed matter realization of the anomalies in quantum field theories but also demonstrates the topological classification beyond the gapped topological insulators. Here, we identify a topological Weyl semimetal state in the transition metal monopnictide materials class. Our first-principles calculations on TaAs reveal its bulk Weyl fermion cones and surface Fermi arcs. Our results show that in the TaAs-type materials the Weyl semimetal state does not depend on fine-tuning of chemical composition or magnetic order, which opens the door for the experimental realization of Weyl semimetals and Fermi arc surface states in real materials.
Nature Physics | 2015
Su Yang Xu; Nasser Alidoust; Ilya Belopolski; Zhujun Yuan; Guang Bian; Tay-Rong Chang; Hao Zheng; V. N. Strocov; Daniel S. Sanchez; Guoqing Chang; Chenglong Zhang; Daixiang Mou; Yun Wu; Lunan Huang; Chi Cheng Lee; Shin-Ming Huang; Baokai Wang; A. Bansil; Horng-Tay Jeng; Titus Neupert; A. Kaminski; Hsin Lin; Shuang Jia; M. Zahid Hasan
We report the discovery of Weyl semimetal NbAs featuring topological Fermi arc surface states.
Nature Communications | 2016
Guang Bian; Tay-Rong Chang; Raman Sankar; Su Yang Xu; Hao Zheng; Titus Neupert; Ching Kai Chiu; Shin-Ming Huang; Guoqing Chang; Ilya Belopolski; Daniel S. Sanchez; Madhab Neupane; Nasser Alidoust; Chang Liu; Bao Kai Wang; Chi Cheng Lee; Horng-Tay Jeng; Chenglong Zhang; Zhujun Yuan; Shuang Jia; A. Bansil; Fangcheng Chou; Hsin Lin; M. Zahid Hasan
Topological semimetals can support one-dimensional Fermi lines or zero-dimensional Weyl points in momentum space, where the valence and conduction bands touch. While the degeneracy points in Weyl semimetals are robust against any perturbation that preserves translational symmetry, nodal lines require protection by additional crystalline symmetries such as mirror reflection. Here we report, based on a systematic theoretical study and a detailed experimental characterization, the existence of topological nodal-line states in the non-centrosymmetric compound PbTaSe2 with strong spin-orbit coupling. Remarkably, the spin-orbit nodal lines in PbTaSe2 are not only protected by the reflection symmetry but also characterized by an integer topological invariant. Our detailed angle-resolved photoemission measurements, first-principles simulations and theoretical topological analysis illustrate the physical mechanism underlying the formation of the topological nodal-line states and associated surface states for the first time, thus paving the way towards exploring the exotic properties of the topological nodal-line fermions in condensed matter systems.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2008
Chenggang Zhuang; S. Meng; Chenglong Zhang; Qingrong Feng; Z. Z. Gan; H. Yang; Ying Jia; Hai-Hu Wen; Xiaoxing Xi
We have studied the current-carrying capability of high quality epitaxial MgB2 films synthesized using the hybrid physical-chemical vapor deposition technique by both transport measurement in nanobridge constrictions and magnetization measurement. An extremely high self-field critical current density Jc(0)>108A∕cm2, approaching the theoretical depairing current of MgB2, was observed on a 150nm bridge, indicating an excellent current-carrying capability in these films. The magnetization measurement also showed very high Jc.
Nature Physics | 2017
Qiong Ma; Su-Yang Xu; Ching-Kit Chan; Chenglong Zhang; Guoqing Chang; Y. Lin; Weiwei Xie; Tomas Palacios; Hsin Lin; Shuang Jia; Patrick A. Lee; Pablo Jarillo-Herrero; Nuh Gedik
Measuring the photocurrent response to circularly polarized mid-infrared light provides direct access to the chirality of Weyl fermions in Weyl semimetals — the property responsible for a range of exotic phenomena.
Physical Review B | 2015
Chenglong Zhang; Cheng Guo; Hong Lu; Xiao Zhang; Zhujun Yuan; Ziquan Lin; Junfeng Wang; Shuang Jia
We report extremely large magnetoresistance (MR) in an extended temperature regime from 1.5 K to 300 K in non-magnetic binary compounds TaP and NbP. TaP exhibits linear MR around
Physical Review X | 2015
Yanfei Zhao; Haiwen Liu; Chenglong Zhang; Huichao Wang; Junfeng Wang; Ziquan Lin; Ying Xing; Hong Lu; Jun Liu; Yong Wang; Scott M. Brombosz; Zhili Xiao; Shuang Jia; X. C. Xie; Jian Wang
1.8times 10^4
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Su Yang Xu; Ilya Belopolski; Daniel S. Sanchez; Madhab Neupane; Guoqing Chang; Koichiro Yaji; Zhujun Yuan; Chenglong Zhang; Kenta Kuroda; Guang Bian; Cheng Guo; Hong Lu; Tay-Rong Chang; Nasser Alidoust; Hao Zheng; Chi Cheng Lee; Shin-Ming Huang; Chuang Han Hsu; Horng-Tay Jeng; A. Bansil; Titus Neupert; Fumio Komori; Takeshi Kondo; Shik Shin; Hsin Lin; Shuang Jia; M. Zahid Hasan
at 2 K in a magnetic field of 9 Tesla, which further follows its linearity up to
Nature Physics | 2017
Chenglong Zhang; Su-Yang Xu; C. M. Wang; Ziquan Lin; Z. Z. Du; Cheng Guo; Chi-Cheng Lee; Hong Lu; Yiyang Feng; Shin-Ming Huang; Guoqing Chang; Chuang-Han Hsu; Haiwen Liu; Hsin Lin; Liang Li; Chi Zhang; Jinglei Zhang; X. C. Xie; Titus Neupert; M. Zahid Hasan; Hai-Zhou Lu; Junfeng Wang; Shuang Jia
1.4times 10^5