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      Symmetry-enforced band crossings in trigonal materials: Accordion states and Weyl nodal lines

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          Abstract

          Nonsymmoprhic symmetries, such as screw rotations or glide reflections, can enforce band crossings within high-symmetry lines or planes of the Brillouin zone. When these band degeneracies are close to the Fermi energy, they can give rise to a number of unusual phenomena: e.g., anomalous magnetoelectric responses, transverse Hall currents, and exotic surface states. In this paper, we present a comprehensive classification of such nonsymmorphic band crossings in trigonal materials with strong spin-orbit coupling. We find that in trigonal systems there are two different types of nonsymmorphic band degeneracies: (i) Weyl points protected by screw rotations with an accordion-like dispersion, and (ii) Weyl nodal lines protected by glide reflections. We report a number of existing materials, where these band crossings are realized near the Fermi energy. This includes Cu2SrSnS4 and elemental tellurium (Te), which exhibit accordion Weyl points; and the tellurium-silicon clathrate Te16Si38, which shows Weyl nodal lines. The ab-initio band structures and surface states of these materials are studied in detail, and implications for experiments are briefly discussed.

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          AFLOWLIB.ORG: A distributed materials properties repository from high-throughput ab initio calculations

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            A simple effective potential for exchange.

            The optimized effective potential (OEP) for exchange was introduced some time ago by Sharp and Horton and by Talman and Shadwick. The integral equation for the OEP is difficult to solve, however, and a variety of approximations have therefore been proposed. These are explicitly orbital dependent and require the same two-electron integrals as Hartree-Fock theory. We have found a remarkably simple approximate effective potential that closely resembles the Talman-Shadwick potential in atoms. It depends only on total densities and requires no two-electron integrals.
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              Absence of neutrinos on a lattice

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                02 August 2019
                Article
                1908.00901
                1fd65f20-31a0-4918-8f2b-2e735ef65ac0

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                13 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables
                cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.mes-hall

                Condensed matter,Nanophysics
                Condensed matter, Nanophysics

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