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

Gaby Clark
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

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 Suárez-RodrÃguez—working under the guidance of Ikerbasque Professors Fèlix Casanova and Luis E. Hueso at CIC nanoGUNE, together with Prof. Marco Gobbi at the Materials Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics 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 Suárez-RodrÃguez. "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 Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics Center, DIPC) and Ivo Souza (CFM) helped clarify how broken inversion symmetry unlocks new microscopic mechanisms—chief among them the Berry curvature dipole and the recently proposed Berry-connection polarizability—that generate nonlinear and rectification voltages directly from an applied bias.
"Because these mechanisms are intrinsic to the material itself—not to interfaces or external stimuli—they can operate across a wide frequency range and down to the single-layer limit," adds Suárez-RodrÃguez.

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—opening possibilities for on-chip RF harvesters and biosensors.
The review is already serving as a roadmap for researchers developing quantum-enabled electronics—where "breaking the rules" of Ohm's law is the key.
More information: Manuel Suárez-RodrÃguez et al, Nonlinear transport in non-centrosymmetric systems, Nature Materials (2025).
Journal information: Nature Materials
Provided by Elhuyar Fundazioa