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MSE Seminar: “Chemical Bonds in Topological Materials” (Princeton University)

February 28, 2023 at 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM
Details
Date: February 28, 2023
Time: 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM
Event Category: Seminar
  • Event Tags:
  • Organizer
    Materials Science and Engineering
    Phone: 215-898-2462
    Venue
    Glandt Forum, Singh Center for Nanotechnology 3205 Walnut Street
    Philadelphia
    PA 19104
    Google Map

    Topological materials are solid-state compounds that have atypical charge carriers, often acting analogously to particles in high-energy physics. They are significant for both fundamental and applied science, with potential uses in spintronics, catalysis, and quantum information science. But despite the great promise of this field, the majority of known topological materials conform to the same handful of structure types. By utilizing chemical principles, we can design and discover new topological materials and investigate their unusual charge transport and magnetism.

    In the first half of my talk, I will focus on synthetic routes to new subchalcogenide topological semimetals. Subchalcogenides are a hybrid class of materials between intermetallics and chalcogenides, containing both metal-metal and metal-chalcogenide interactions. Their diverse bonding character leads to quasi-lower-dimensional metallic substructures, which have greater potential for electron-electron interactions. The subchalcogenides Ir2In8Q (Q = S, Se, Te) are a newly reported family of Dirac semimetals, with large, anistropic magnetoresistance, high charge carrier mobility, and reversible electronic instabilities. This family of compounds offer a new platform for probing the interactions of electronic instabilities and topology, along with expanding the known library of topological structures. In the second half of my talk, I will discuss hypervalent (electron-rich) chemical bonding as a design principle for new topological semimetals, with a focus on quasi-one-dimensional hypervalent Bi chains. Delocalized, electron-rich bonding has been shown to be an effective design principle to find new topological square-net materials, with band inversion occurring at the Fermi level of compounds with the ideal electron count and number of atoms in the unit cell. Through these synthetic and bonding approaches to identifying new topological materials, we show that chemists play a vital role in advancing the field.