Observation of D-class topology in an acoustic metamaterial

Sci Bull (Beijing). 2024 Apr 15;69(7):893-900. doi: 10.1016/j.scib.2024.01.041. Epub 2024 Feb 1.

Abstract

Topological materials and metamaterials opened new paradigms to create and manipulate phases of matter with unconventional properties. Topological D-class phases (TDPs) are archetypes of the ten-fold classification of topological phases with particle-hole symmetry. In two dimensions, TDPs support propagating topological edge modes that simulate the elusive Majorana elementary particles. Furthermore, a piercing of π-flux Dirac-solenoids in TDPs stabilizes localized Majorana excitations that can be braided for the purpose of topological quantum computation. Such two-dimensional (2D) TDPs have been a focus in the research frontier, but their experimental realizations are still under debate. Here, with a novel design scheme, we realize 2D TDPs in an acoustic crystal by synthesizing both the particle-hole and fermion-like time reversal symmetries for a wide range of frequencies. The design scheme leverages an enriched unit cell structure with real-valued couplings that emulate the targeted Hamiltonian of TDPs with complex hoppings: A technique that could unlock the realization of all topological classes with passive metamaterials. In our experiments, we realize a pair of TDPs with opposite Chern numbers in two independent sectors that are connected by an intrinsic fermion-like time-reversal symmetry built in the system. We measure the acoustic Majorana-like helical edge modes and visualize their robust topological transport, thus revealing the unprecedented D and DIII class topologies with direct evidence. Our study opens up a new pathway for the experimental realization of two fundamental classes of topological phases and may offer new insights in fundamental physics, materials science, and phononic information processing.

Keywords: Chiral symmetry; D-class topology; Gapless edge states; Particle-hole symmetry; Time-reversal symmetry.