ʵ

News

Weyl metamaterials offer a novel route to 3D electronic devices

Researchers show how the principles of general relativity open the door to novel electronic applications including the 3D electron lens and electronic invisibility devices.
a) By local manipulation of material parameters, it is possible to tune the properties of charge carriers in Weyl semimetals, b) With suitable local manipulation of material parameters one can tailor the carrier motion and design novel electronic devices such as the electron lens, which focuses the incoming carriers. Picture: Teemu Ojanen.

In the new study Aalto University researchers Alex Westström and Teemu Ojanen propose a method to go beyond special relativity and simulate Einstein’s theory of general relativity in inhomogeneous Weyl semimetals. The theory of Weyl metamaterials combines ideas from solid-state physics, particle physics and cosmology and point a way to fabricate metallic designer materials where charge carriers move like particles in a curved space-time.

The researchers propose Weyl metamaterials, a generalization of Weyl semimetals, that enable new types of electronic devices through geometry engineering.

“The systems we introduced offer a route to make the charge carriers move as if they were living in a curved geometry, providing a tabletop laboratory for simulating curved-space quantum physics and certain cosmological phenomena,” explains Alex Westström.

Weyl semimetals are one example of recently discovered quantum materials that have received a lot of attention. Charge carriers in these materials behave as if they were massless particles moving at the speed of light.

“We discovered that Weyl metamaterials may serve as a platform for exotic electronic devices such as the 3d electron lens, where the trajectories of charge carriers are focused much like beams of light in an optical lens,” says Aalto University Docent Teemu Ojanen.

The electric conduction in Weyl semimetals reflects the physics of Einstein’s special theory of relativity. Nevertheless, special relativity also assumes an absence of gravity, which Einstein formulated as a geometry of space-time.

The theory of Weyl metamaterials also pave the way for fundamentally new electronics applications, for instance the development of electronic invisibility devices. The key idea behind the potential applications is an artificially created curved geometry, which bends the motion of charge carriers in a controlled way.

“In optics it has been known for centuries that light always chooses a trajectory which is the quickest. In a curved geometry, the quickest path does not look like a straight line for those watching outside. The functionality of optical invisibility devices where the beams of light bypass a hidden object is in fact based on application of curved-space geometry. It would be a breakthrough in fundamental research to achieve similar functionality in electronic systems”, adds Ojanen.

The research results were published in Physical Review X on October 29, 2017. The study was performed at Aalto University’s Department of Applied Physics, in the group Theory of Quantum Matter.  The Academy of Finland funded the research.

Further information:

Teemu Ojanen
Docent
Aalto University
teemu.ojanen@aalto.fi

Article:

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Filmbot robot
Research & Art Published:

Researchers make micromanipulation more accessible

FilMBot aims to lower the barrier to high-precision work in education, research, and micro-assembly
Research often involves choosing a single analytic path, but there are other options available, Picture: Matti Ahlgren, Aalto University.
Press releases Published:

Scientific conclusions depend on who performs the analysis

More than 450 independent researchers from around the world conducted over 500 re-analyses of datasets from one hundred previously published studies in the social and behavioural sciences. All analysts received the same data and the same central research question, but they were free to carry out the analysis based on their own expert judgment.
Group of students at round tables talking and working on laptops in a bright office space
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Positive communication and improvisation help build students’ communication skills to meet employer needs

The School of Business redesigned its mandatory first-year communication course
Avner Peled's doctoral thesis presented in the Aalto ARTS 2025 annual review
Research & Art Published:

Learning Environments Research Group — 2025 in Review

2025 recap: three doctoral theses on context-aware interaction design, AI as creative learning partner, and telerobotic puppetry for peacebuilding.