Abstract

Dirac fermion in topological materials exhibits intriguing nonlinear optical responses. However, their direct correlation with the linearly dispersed band remains elusive experimentally. Here, we take topological semimetal ZrSiS as a paradigm, unveiling three unique nonlinear optical signatures of Dirac fermion. These signatures include strong quadrupolar response, quantum interference effect, and exponential divergent four-wave mixing (FWM), all of which are described by the prominent third-order nonlinear optical susceptibility. Resonantly enhanced by linear bands, quadrupolar second harmonic generation in centrosymmetric bulk overwhelms the electric-dipole contribution at the surface with inherent inversion symmetry breaking. Furthermore, owing to the interference between multiple resonant transition pathways within linear bands, difference-frequency FWM is several orders of magnitude stronger than sum-frequency FWM and third harmonic generation. The difference-frequency FWM further displays an inverse-square divergence toward degenerate excitation, whose scaling law perfectly matches with the long-sought behavior of Dirac fermion. These signatures lay the solid foundation toward the practical applications of topological materials in nonlinear optoelectronics and photonics.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call