Chiral anomaly trapped in Weyl metals

Nonequilibrium valley polarization at zero magnetic field

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Pablo M. Pérez (Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Barcelona)

Nicandro Bovenzi (Universiteit Leiden)

Anton R. Akhmerov (Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft, TU Delft - QN/Akhmerov Group)

Maxim Breitkreiz (Freie Universität Berlin)

Research Group
QN/Akhmerov Group
Copyright
© 2021 Pablo M. Perez-Piskunow, Nicandro Bovenzi, A.R. Akhmerov, Maxim Breitkreiz
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.21468/SCIPOSTPHYS.11.2.046
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 Pablo M. Perez-Piskunow, Nicandro Bovenzi, A.R. Akhmerov, Maxim Breitkreiz
Research Group
QN/Akhmerov Group
Issue number
2
Volume number
11
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Abstract

In Weyl semimetals, the application of parallel electric and magnetic fields leads to valley polarization-an occupation disbalance of valleys of opposite chirality-a direct consequence of the chiral anomaly. In this work, we present numerical tools to explore such nonequilibrium effects in spatially confined three-dimensional systems with a variable disorder potential, giving exact solutions to leading order in the disorder potential and the applied electric field. Application to a Weyl-metal slab shows that valley polarization also occurs without an external magnetic field as an effect of chiral anomaly “trapping”: Spatial confinement produces chiral bulk states, which enable the valley polarization in a similar way as the chiral states induced by a magnetic field. Despite its finite-size origin, the valley polarization can persist up to macroscopic length scales if the disorder potential is sufficiently long ranged, so that direct inter-valley scattering is suppressed and the relaxation then goes via the Fermi-arc surface states.