Research Seminars @ Illinois

Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

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Condensed Matter Seminar - "Excitonic Insulators, Nematicity, and Ferroaxiality: Probing Hidden Symmetry Breaking with Strain"

Mar 27, 2026   1:00 pm  
ESB 190
Sponsor
Physics - Condensed Matter
Speaker
Jiun-Haw Chu, University of Washington
Contact
Stephen Bullwinkel
E-Mail
bullwink@illinois.edu
Phone
217-333-1652
Views
31
Originating Calendar
Physics - Condensed Matter Seminar

The excitonic insulator is a condensate of electron-hole pairs, conceptually analogous to the Cooper pair condensate in superconductors. Long postulated as an electronic instability in small-gap semiconductors and semimetals, its unambiguous identification has remained challenging, particularly in bulk materials. Two obstacles are especially formidable: the charge-neutral nature of the electron-hole condensate makes it invisible to conventional electric and magnetic probes, while the inevitable coupling between electronic and lattice degrees of freedom obscures the primary driving mechanism.

In this talk, I will demonstrate how in-situ strain serves as a symmetry-resolved tuning knob to probe and control the order parameters of two leading excitonic insulator candidates: Ta2NiSe5 and 1T-TiSe2. In Ta2NiSe5, applying mirror-symmetry-breaking shear strain couples directly to the order parameter, and elastocaloric measurements reveal a thermodynamic susceptibility that follows a Curie-Weiss law with a Curie temperature lying only ~10% below the structural transition temperature. This proximity corroborates a non-structural driving mechanism and strengthens the case for an excitonic origin. Remarkably, Ta2NiSe5 emerges as a prototypical realization of ferroaxial order - a state that breaks all vertical mirror planes while preserving inversion and the horizontal mirror symmetry, and which is notoriously difficult to detect by conventional means.

In 1T-TiSe2, where a chiral charge density wave has long been debated, symmetry-resolved elastoresistivity measurements reveal an intrinsic antisymmetric off-diagonal response satisfying m12 = −m21, a bulk transport signature unambiguously identifying ferroaxial rather than chiral order. Combined with elastocaloric mapping across strain and temperature, our results establish a clear symmetry-breaking hierarchy: a primary CDW transition is followed by a ferroaxial (A2g) instability, which in turn sets the stage for a nematic (Eg) transition deep within the ordered phase. These findings reframe the symmetry landscape of 1T-TiSe2 and reconcile previously conflicting surface-sensitive and bulk measurements. Taken together, the two systems illustrate how strain-based techniques serve as essential and discriminating probes for uncovering hidden symmetry breaking in quantum materials.

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