Abstract

The nondissipative (Hall) viscosity is known to play an interesting role in two-dimensional (2D) topological states of matter, in the hydrodynamic regime of correlated materials, and in classical active fluids with broken time-reversal symmetry (TRS). However, generalizations of these effects to 3D have remained elusive. In this work, we address this question by studying the Hall viscoelastic response of 3D crystals. We show that for systems with tetrahedral symmetries, there exist new, intrinsically 3D Hall viscosity coefficients that cannot be obtained via a reduction to a quasi-2D system. To study these coefficients, we specialize to a theoretically and experimentally motivated tight-binding model for a chiral magnetic metal in (magnetic) space group [(M)SG] P2$_1$3 (No. 198.9), a nonpolar group of recent experimental interest that hosts both chiral magnets and topological semimetals (TSMs). Using the Kubo formula for viscosity, we compute two forms of the Hall viscosity, phonon and ``momentum'' (conventional) and show that for the tight-binding model we consider, both forms realize the novel cubic Hall viscosity. We conclude by discussing the implication of our results for transport in 2D magnetic metals and discuss some candidate materials in which these effects may be observed.

Highlights

  • The discovery of hydrodynamic flow in twodimensional (2D) metallic systems [1,2] has renewed interest in the study of nondissipative “Hall” viscosity

  • Hall viscosity (MHV and phonon Hall viscosity (PHV)), which appears with tetrahedral symmetry

  • As a proof-of-concept, we have shown that these viscosities are nonzero for a threefold fermion at the point in MSG P213 (No 198.9)

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Summary

Introduction

The discovery of hydrodynamic flow in twodimensional (2D) metallic systems [1,2] has renewed interest in the study of nondissipative “Hall” viscosity. Hall viscosity appears in classical fluids with broken time-reversal symmetry (TRS) like chiral active fluids [17,18]. This “momentum” Hall viscosity (MHV) describes a stress response that can be related to a. Looking beyond 2D, in this work we find that tetrahedral symmetry allows for the appearance of a new, fundamentally 3D “cubic” Hall viscosity.

Published by the American Physical Society
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Conclusion
We also emphasize that the MHV and PHV are responses
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