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Wenhui Fan

Wenhui Fan contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Curriculum Learning of Physics-Informed Neural Networks based on Spatial Correlation

Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) combine deep learning with physical constraints for solving partial differential equations (PDEs), and are widely applied in fluid mechanics, heat transfer, and solid mechanics. However, PINN training still suffers from high-dimensional non-convex loss landscapes, imbalanced multiobjective constraints, and ineffective information propagation. Existing curriculum learning and causality-guided strategies improve training stability, but mainly focus on temporal or parametric progression, lacking explicit treatment of spatial information propagation and inter-region consistency. Moreover, they are not directly applicable to boundary value problems (BVPs) with strong spatial coupling. To address this issue, we propose a spatially correlated curriculum learning framework for PINNs. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to address PINN training difficulties from the perspective of spatial coupling among subregions. First, spatial causal weights guide information from near-boundary regions inward, reducing optimization failures and spurious convergence. Second, a low-frequency information bridge enforces pseudo-label-based consistency across spatially separated regions, suppressing global low-frequency drift. Third, a region-adaptive reweighting strategy adjusts subregion losses to reduce local residuals and recover high-frequency details. Experiments on PDE benchmarks show that, under comparable computational cost, the proposed method alleviates training failures and improves solution accuracy. The code is available at https://github.com/pigofmomo/CurriculumLearningPINN.

preprint2022arXiv

Multiple mobile excitons manifested as sidebands in quasi-one-dimensional metallic TaSe3

Charge neutrality and their expected itinerant nature makes excitons potential transmitters of information. However, exciton mobility remains inaccessible to traditional optical experiments that only create and detect excitons with negligible momentum. Here, using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we detect dispersing excitons in the quasi-one-dimensional metallic trichalcogenide, TaSe3. The low density of conduction electrons and the low dimensionality in TaSe3 combined with a polaronic renormalization of the conduction band and the poorly screened interaction between these polarons and photo-induced valence holes leads to various excitonic bound states that we interpret as intrachain and interchain excitons, and possibly trions. The thresholds for the formation of a photo-hole together with an exciton appear as side valence bands with dispersions nearly parallel to the main valence band, but shifted to lower excitation energies. The energy separation between side and main valence bands can be controlled by surface doping, enabling the tuning of certain exciton properties.

preprint2021arXiv

Discovery of two families of VSb-based compounds with V-kagome lattice

We report the structure and physical properties of two newly-discovered compounds AV8Sb12 and AV6Sb6 (A = Cs, Rb), which have C2 (space group: Cmmm) and C3 (space group: R-3m) symmetry, respectively. The basic V-kagome unit is present in both compounds, but stacking differently. A V2Sb2 layer is sandwiched between two V3Sb5 layers in AV8Sb12, altering the V-kagome lattice and lowering the symmetry of kagome layer from hexagonal to orthorhombic. In AV6Sb6, the building block is a more complex slab made up of two half-V3Sb5 layers that are intercalated by Cs cations along the c-axis. Transport property measurements demonstrate that both compounds are nonmagnetic metals, with carrier concentrations at around 1021cm-3. No superconductivity has been observed in CsV8Sb12 above 0.3 K under in-situ pressure up to 46 GPa. In contrast to CsV3Sb5, theoretical calculations and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) reveal a quasi-two-dimensional electronic structure in CsV8Sb12 with C2 symmetry and no van Hove singularities near the Fermi level. Our findings will stimulate more research into V-based kagome quantum materials.

preprint2020arXiv

Magnetic topological insulator MnBi6Te10 with zero-field ferromagnetic state and gapped Dirac surface states

Magnetic topological insulators (TIs) with nontrivial topological electronic structure and broken time-reversal symmetry exhibit various exotic topological quantum phenomena. The realization of such exotic phenomena at high temperature is one of central topics in this area. We reveal that MnBi6Te10 is a magnetic TI with an antiferromagnetic ground state below 10.8 K whose nontrivial topology is manifested by Dirac-like surface states. The ferromagnetic axion insulator state with Z4 = 2 emerges once spins polarized at field as low as 0.1 T, accompanied with saturated anomalous Hall resistivity up to 10 K. Such a ferromagnetic state is preserved even external field down to zero at 2 K. Theoretical calculations indicate that the few-layer ferromagnetic MnBi6Te10 is also topologically nontrivial with a non-zero Chern number. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy experiments further reveal three types of Dirac surface states arising from different terminations on the cleavage surfaces, one of which has insulating behavior with an energy gap of ~ 28 meV at the Dirac point. These outstanding features suggest that MnBi6Te10 is a promising system to realize various topological quantum effects at zero field and high temperature.