Zero-Mode Corner States: Higher-Order Topology
- Zero-mode corner states are exponentially localized eigenmodes at a sample's corners, emerging from the interplay of bulk topology and lattice symmetry.
- They are characterized by quantized invariants such as the quadrupole moment and Bott indices, and are observable in electronic, mechanical, and fractal platforms.
- Their robust experimental signatures, including sharp resonance peaks and distinct LDOS patterns, make them pivotal for advancing topological material design.
A zero-mode corner state is a robust, exponentially localized eigenmode at a sample's geometric corner, pinned at zero (mid-gap) energy or frequency by a higher-order topological invariant. In crystalline, mechanical, photonic, and electronic media, these states arise from the interplay of bulk topology, lattice symmetry, and dimensional reduction, exemplifying higher-order topological insulator (HOTI) phases. Their hallmark is an emergent bulk–boundary correspondence: a quantized topological index predicts the existence and multiplicity of these 0D boundary modes, distinct from conventional 1D edge or surface states.
1. Generic Models and Classification of Zero-Mode Corner States
Zero-mode corner states appear across a wide range of platforms—tight-binding electronic models, classical mechanical or electromagnetic metamaterials, and even fractal or non-Hermitian lattices.
- Quadrupole Insulators / BBH Model: The canonical HOTI is Benalcazar–Bernevig–Hughes (BBH)–type quantized quadrupole insulator, realized in tight-binding lattices with off-diagonal Wilson-type couplings and protected by two reflection symmetries , , and chiral symmetry (Imhof et al., 2017). Its minimal Hamiltonian is written (in the convention of (Imhof et al., 2017)),
with Dirac matrices – chosen per lattice convention. The regime exhibits a nontrivial quantized quadrupole moment , with one zero mode per corner, localized as (Imhof et al., 2017, Zhang et al., 1 Apr 2025, Li et al., 2023).
- Breathing Kagome and Extended Lattices: Breathing kagome models and their extensions (including longer-range hoppings) host zero-energy corner states in both symmetry-protected and fragile topological phases. Extended models can exhibit multiple corner states per corner, realized as bound states in the continuum (BICs), counted by integer invariants even when a large zero-energy bulk continuum is present (Zhang et al., 1 Apr 2025, Li et al., 2023).
- Chiral-Symmetric and Real-Space Characterization: Recent advances use real-space invariants, such as families of Bott indices (Li et al., 2024), to diagnose, count, and spatially resolve zero-mode corner states in arbitrary geometry and without reliance on momentum-space multi-pole moments. For chiral symmetric systems, the Bott index , with appropriately chosen polynomial-twist unitaries , gives the topological count and pattern of corners with zero modes.
- Mechanical Metamaterials and Elastic HOTIs: In continuous elastic or spring-mass lattices (e.g. honeycomb beam–block networks (Fan et al., 2018), checkerboard rigid-quad structures (Saremi et al., 2018)), zero-mode corner localizations are predicted via generalized Maxwell rigidity counting and topological degree invariants. For mechanical graphene with elastic foundations, modulation of out-of-plane foundation stiffness pins zero-frequency corner modes, verified by analytic reduction to finite diatomic chains and robust to bulk disorder (Ba'ba'a, 2022).
- Non-Hermitian Systems: Zero-mode corner states can be stabilized—even in the absence of symmetry in the bulk—by boundary engineering (e.g. boundary "nucleus" attachment), with their existence enforced algebraically through properties of the non-Hermitian block Hamiltonian (Rivero et al., 2023). For second-order NH HOTIs, new bulk–boundary correspondences emerge via the zero-mode singular values in the singular value decomposition (SVD) spectrum of (Yang et al., 4 Jan 2026, Ghosh et al., 2024).
- Fractals and Irregular Geometries: In Sierpiński-triangle fractals of Bi on InSb, zero-mode corner states arise from the fractal's local under-coordination, manifest as sharp LDOS peaks at the triangle apices and protected by the fractal's latent chiral-like symmetry and time-reversal [$2309.09860$].
2. Bulk-Boundary Correspondence, Topological Invariants, and Corner Mode Counting
The existence and number of zero-mode corner states are predicted by quantized invariants relating global bulk topology to 0D boundary signatures.
| Model/Platform | Topological Invariant | Corner Mode Counting |
|---|---|---|
| Quadrupole Insulator | Bulk quadrupole | ⇒ 1 per corner |
| Chiral HOTIs | Bott indices (family) | (pattern solved) |
| Extended Kagome | Integer (momentum-space charge) | $3P$ total (all corners) |
| Elastic HOTI | Bulk polarization (Berry) | 1 per obtuse (120°) hex corner |
| Fractals (Bi/InSb) | Local fractional charge | 1 per under-coordinated apex |
| Non-Hermitian SOTI | Real-space winding | (number of corner singular modes) |
In chiral symmetry–protected cases, the Bott construction yields a full characterization beyond symmetry-based indices or multilayer Wilson-loop approaches, capturing phases beyond quantized multipole moments (Li et al., 2024). In momentum space, the extended kagome lattice requires a counting of special Dirac-type and gapless points; the resulting integer gives the per-corner zero-mode multiplicity even inside a continuum of bulk zero-energy states (Zhang et al., 1 Apr 2025).
For mechanical systems, the unique zero-mode in the checkerboard structure is protected by the topological degree of a complex map associated with the compatibility constraints (Saremi et al., 2018). In elastic HOTIs, obtuse corners (120°) are topologically favored, as reflected in integer index changes across different polygonal geometries (Fan et al., 2018).
3. Wavefunction Localization, Robustness, and Experimental Manifestations
- Spatial Profile: The zero-mode corner states are exponentially localized at their respective corners, with the decay length set by bulk coupling ratios, e.g., for the breathing/higher-order kagome lattice, or by the degree of constraint asymmetry for mechanical structures (Zhang et al., 1 Apr 2025, Fan et al., 2018, Ba'ba'a, 2022).
- Disorder Robustness: Topological (but not trivial) corner modes are highly robust to bulk and edge disorder, persisting under various symmetry-respecting perturbations, local mass/boundary defects, or coupling variation (Fan et al., 2018, Miao et al., 2024, Ba'ba'a, 2022). In non-Hermitian settings, the SVD-based singular zero modes are protected against substantial disorder in the bulk (Yang et al., 4 Jan 2026). Lattice-mode immunity tests distinguish genuine higher-order topology from fragile or atomic corners (Miert et al., 2020).
- Direct Detection: Mechanical corner modes are observed in frequency-resolved vibrational scanning (e.g. laser-Doppler vibrometry (Fan et al., 2018)), circuit corner states manifest as sharp impedance-resonance peaks at the corner nodes (Imhof et al., 2017, Li et al., 2023), and scanning tunneling microscopy directly images LDOS peaks at Sierpiński fractal corners (Canyellas et al., 2023).
- Multiplicity and Spatial Overlap: In -class HOTIs, multiple zero-modes can be spatially overlapped at a single corner, in contrast to the single-mode-per-corner cases. Experimentally, the spatial extent and the LDOS distribution among the multiple degenerate states increase with (Li et al., 2023).
4. Shape and Symmetry Dependence
- Polygonal Geometry: The presence, number, and symmetry of zero-mode corner states are highly sensitive to the local boundary angles and the symmetry class (Fan et al., 2018, Poata et al., 2023, Ba'ba'a, 2022). Acute corners (60° in honeycomb lattices) can support trivial corner states that shift or disappear under disorder, while obtuse corners (120° in hexagonal elastic HOTI) uniquely host topological, robust zero-modes (Fan et al., 2018).
- Symmetry Analysis: Higher-order topology is protected by symmetries: e.g., mirror, chiral, reflection ( in BBH), or even point group rotation in extended kagome/breathing models. In fragile or symmetry-restricted cases (e.g., -only), no HOTI is possible (Miert et al., 2020). Real-space Bott invariants remain robust even in geometries breaking all crystalline symmetries (Li et al., 2024).
5. Extensions: Non-Hermitian, Floquet, and Fractal Corner States
- Non-Hermitian SOTIs: In non-Hermitian analogs, the correspondence between bulk and corner states is re-framed in terms of singular-value zero modes of , stable under symmetry or disorder (Yang et al., 4 Jan 2026, Ghosh et al., 2024). The bulk–corner correspondence is fully restored by real-space winding-type indices, accounting for non-Bloch effects and bi-orthogonalization.
- Floquet HOTIs: The existence of zero- and -mode corner states in periodically driven (Floquet) crystals is dictated by singular-value–based invariants constructed from the one-period evolution operator (Yang et al., 4 Jan 2026).
- Fractal Lattices: Fractals such as Sierpiński triangles support quantized corner charges and robust zero modes at apical points, even without well-defined crystal momentum. These zero modes exist as a consequence of local coordination mismatch and persist under moderate Rashba SOC and disorder, so long as a latent chiral or crystalline symmetry is preserved (Canyellas et al., 2023).
6. Experimental Realizations, Engineering, and Prospects
- Mechanical and Elastic Systems: Elastic HOTIs are realized in laser-cut beam–block lattices, scanning the energy spectrum by point excitation and laser vibrometry to locate robust corner mid-gap modes (Fan et al., 2018). Rigid quadrilateral checkerboards display highly localized, mechanically amplified responses at corners (Saremi et al., 2018). Mechanical graphene with foundation alternation yields zero-frequency corner deformations under properly tuned stiffness ratios (Ba'ba'a, 2022).
- Circuit Quantum Simulation: Quantized corner states are resolved in topolectrical circuits via impedance spectroscopy, allowing for visualization and programmable stacking of multiple -class modes per corner (Li et al., 2023, Imhof et al., 2017).
- Photonic and Acoustic Platforms: Multiple corner BICs are observable as corner-localized high- Fano resonances in photonic or acoustic kagome arrays, measured via local electromagnetic transmission (Zhang et al., 1 Apr 2025).
- Fractal Quantum Materials: STM conductance maps image zero-bias peaks at Sierpiński-triangle corners in Bi/InSb samples, with tight-binding and muffin-tin models accurately reproducing the measured LDOS (Canyellas et al., 2023).
7. Open Questions and Limitations
- Higher-order topological invariants for arbitrary, non-crystalline shapes are now accessible via families of Bott indices, but their full mathematical classification for strongly disordered or amorphous systems remains open (Li et al., 2024).
- Quadrupole moment–based correspondence is subtle: it may fail even when corner modes are present or absent in the energy spectrum—the actual bulk–boundary connection can reside in the entanglement spectrum or flattened Hamiltonian (Tao et al., 2023).
- In -symmetric and even certain kagome models, claimed corner modes can be entirely trivial and fragile, failing immunity tests under boundary or symmetry-allowed perturbations (Miert et al., 2020).
- For non-Hermitian settings, comprehensive correspondence of zero-energy (or singular-value) corner modes with bulk topological indices depends on accounting for non-Bloch effects and the bi-orthogonal structure (Yang et al., 4 Jan 2026, Ghosh et al., 2024).
Zero-mode corner states constitute a defining signature of higher-order topology in two and higher dimensions. Their rigorous understanding now encompasses a spectrum of physical contexts, from crystalline symmetry–protected electronic systems to reconfigurable metamaterials, classical circuits, and disordered or fractal lattices, unified by advanced real-space or algebraic topological invariants that dictate their existence, stability, and multiplicity.