A soft-clamped topological waveguide for phonons

Nature. 2025 Jun;642(8069):947-953. doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-09092-x. Epub 2025 Jun 4.

Abstract

Topological insulators were originally discovered for electron waves in condensed-matter systems. Recently, this concept has been transferred to bosonic systems such as photons1 and phonons2, which propagate in materials patterned with artificial lattices that emulate spin-Hall physics. This work has been motivated, in part, by the prospect of topologically protected transport along edge channels in on-chip circuits2,3. In principle, topology protects propagation against backscattering, but not against loss, which has remained limited to the dB cm-1 level for phononic waveguides, whether topological4-7 or not8-19. Here we combine advanced dissipation engineering20-in particular, the recently introduced method of soft clamping21-with the concept of valley-Hall topological insulators for phonons22-26. This enables on-chip phononic waveguides with propagation losses due to dissipation of 3 dB km-1 at room temperature, orders of magnitude below any previous chip-scale devices. The low losses also allow us to accurately quantify backscattering protection in topological phononic waveguides, using high-resolution ultrasound spectroscopy. We infer that phonons follow a sharp, 120° bend with a 99.99% probability instead of being scattered back, and less than one phonon in a million is lost. Our work will inspire new research directions on ultralow-loss phononic waveguides and will provide a clean bosonic system for investigating topological protection and non-Hermitian topological physics.