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Breaking Ohm's law: Nonlinear currents emerge in symmetry-broken materials

Breaking Ohm's law: Nonlinear currents emerge  in symmetry-broken materials
Artistic representation of the breakdown of Ohm鈥檚 law and the resulting nonlinear effects in a non-centrosymmetric crystal. Credit: Elhuyar Fundazioa

In a review just in Nature Materials, researchers take aim at the oldest principle in electronics: Ohm's law.

Their article, "Nonlinear transport in non-centrosymmetric systems," brings together rapidly growing evidence that, when a material lacks inversion symmetry, the familiar linear relation between current and voltage can break down, giving rise to striking quadratic responses.

The study was led by Manuel Su谩rez-Rodr铆guez鈥攚orking under the guidance of Ikerbasque Professors F猫lix Casanova and Luis E. Hueso at CIC nanoGUNE, together with Prof. Marco Gobbi at the Materials 糖心视频ics Center (CFM, CSIC-UPV/EHU).

"Over the past five years we have observed numerous reports of nonlinear transport effects intimately linked to the symmetry of the host material," explains lead author Su谩rez-Rodr铆guez. "Once we grasped this connection, our goal was to weave the disparate results into a coherent picture that condensed-matter and materials physicists can exploit to advance this promising field."

Co-authors Fernando de Juan (Donostia International 糖心视频ics Center, DIPC) and Ivo Souza (CFM) helped clarify how broken inversion symmetry unlocks new microscopic mechanisms鈥攃hief among them the Berry curvature dipole and the recently proposed Berry-connection polarizability鈥攖hat generate nonlinear and rectification voltages directly from an applied bias.

"Because these mechanisms are intrinsic to the material itself鈥攏ot to interfaces or 鈥攖hey can operate across a wide frequency range and down to the single-layer limit," adds Su谩rez-Rodr铆guez.

Breaking Ohm's law: Nonlinear currents emerge  in symmetry-broken materials
Wireless RF rectification. Credit: Nature Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-025-02261-3

Beyond fundamental interest, the team highlights two application frontiers. First, nonlinear effects provide a versatile and powerful route to probe charge-to-spin conversion, helping identify candidate materials for next-generation spintronics.

Second, these effects can be harnessed for wireless radio-frequency rectification, promising size reductions of several orders of magnitude relative to state-of-the-art devices and enabling rectification at, or even below, the microscale鈥攐pening possibilities for on-chip RF harvesters and biosensors.

The is already serving as a roadmap for researchers developing quantum-enabled electronics鈥攚here "breaking the rules" of Ohm's law is the key.

More information: Manuel Su谩rez-Rodr铆guez et al, Nonlinear transport in non-centrosymmetric systems, Nature Materials (2025).

Journal information: Nature Materials

Provided by Elhuyar Fundazioa

Citation: Breaking Ohm's law: Nonlinear currents emerge in symmetry-broken materials (2025, July 2) retrieved 20 July 2025 from /news/2025-07-ohm-law-nonlinear-currents-emerge.html
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