Abstract

Dislocations are ubiquitous in three-dimensional solid-state materials. The interplay of such real space topology with the emergent band topology defined in reciprocal space gives rise to gapless helical modes bound to the line defects. This is known as bulk-dislocation correspondence, in contrast to the conventional bulk-boundary correspondence featuring topological states at boundaries. However, to date rare compelling experimental evidences have been presented for this intriguing topological observable in solid-state systems, owing to the huge challenges in creating controllable dislocations and conclusively identifying topological signals. Here, using a three-dimensional acoustic weak topological insulator with precisely controllable dislocations, we report an unambiguous experimental evidence for the long-desired bulk-dislocation correspondence, through directly measuring the gapless dispersion of the one-dimensional topological dislocation modes. Remarkably, as revealed in our further experiments, the pseudospin-locked dislocation modes can be unidirectionally guided in an arbitrarily-shaped dislocation path. The peculiar topological dislocation transport, expected in a variety of classical wave systems, can provide unprecedented control over wave propagations.

Highlights

  • Dislocations are ubiquitous in three-dimensional solid-state materials

  • The interplay of the dislocation with the emergent band topology defined in reciprocal space can induce many fantastic transport phenomena[11–19], such as abnormal conductance and chiral magnetic effects owing to the presence of one-dimensional (1D) gapless topological modes bound to the dislocations

  • It has been revealed that the topological dislocation modes (TDMs) can serve as a direct probe to detect the bulk topology of a 3D topological insulator (TI)[11–14]

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Summary

Introduction

Dislocations are ubiquitous in three-dimensional solid-state materials. The interplay of such real space topology with the emergent band topology defined in reciprocal space gives rise to gapless helical modes bound to the line defects. Note that the fact of lacking topological surface states on the x–y surface favors our experimental real-space visualization of the TDM signals bounded to the edge dislocation (or the termination of the screw dislocation) on the top surface of the sample

Results
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