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Anisotropic Fano resonance in a Weyl semimetal candidate LaAlSi

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum interference effects play an important role in the optical properties of topological materials. One example is Fano resonance, featured by an asymmetric Breit-Wigner-Fano (BWF) line shape that describes interference between discrete and continuous scattering states. In this work, we present the anisotropic Fano resonance in a type-II Weyl semimetal candidate LaAlSi by polarized Raman spectroscopy using five excitation wavelengths from UV to near-infrared. The B1 phonon mode for 532-nm laser excitation shows anisotropic BWF line shape whose frequency, linewidth, and asymmetry factor all depend on the laser polarization angle. Such anisotropic Fano resonance is unique and rarely observed in solid-state materials. Meanwhile, a scattering background occurs along with the asymmetry constituting the continuous states, which can be explained by double resonant Raman scattering due to flat phonon dispersions in the density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The experimental observations combined with DFT calculations provide valuable insights into the microscopic scattering pathways of LaAlSi, which is essential in understanding the optical scattering process and electron-phonon interactions in topological quantum materials.

Presenters

  • Kunyan Zhang

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University

Authors

  • Kunyan Zhang

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University

  • Tong Wang

    Tohoku University

  • Xiaoqi Pang

    Tohoku University

  • Fei Han

    Nuclear Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Shun-Li Shang

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Nguyen T. Hung

    Tohoku University

  • Zi-Kui Liu

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Mingda Li

    Nuclear Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Riichiro Saito

    Tohoku University

  • Shengxi Huang

    Pennsylvania State University