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Magnetic Weyl semimetal Co<sub>3</sub>Sn<sub>2</sub>S<sub>2 </sub>thin flakes with high electron mobility and large anomalous Hall effect

ORAL

Abstract

Magnetic Weyl semimetals attract considerable interest not only for their topological quantum phenomena but also as an emerging materials class for realizing quantum anomalous Hall effect in the two-dimensional limit. In this work [1], we report a synthesis of high-quality thin flakes of magnetic Weyl semimetal Co3Sn2S2 by chemical vapor transport method. In 250nm-thick thin flake, we identify the largest electron mobility (~2,600 cm2V-1s-1) among magnetic topological semimetals, as well as the large anomalous Hall conductivity (~1,400 Ω-1cm-1) and anomalous Hall angle (~32 %) arising from the Berry curvature. The enhancement of electron mobility and Berry curvature will be discussed in terms of the effective hole doping. Our study provides a viable platform for studying high-quality thin flakes of magnetic Weyl semimetal and stimulate further research on unexplored topological phenomena in the two-dimensional limit.

[1] M. Tanaka, Y. Fujishiro, M. Mogi, Y. Kaneko, T. Yokosawa, N. Kanazawa, S. Minami, T. Koretsune, R. Arita, S. Tarucha, M. Yamamoto and Y. Tokura. Nano Letters 10, 7476 (2020)

Presenters

  • Yukako Fujishiro

    Univ of Tokyo

Authors

  • Yukako Fujishiro

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Miuko Tanaka

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Masataka Mogi

    Univ of Tokyo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Yoshio Kaneko

    RIKEN

  • Takamoto Yokosawa

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Naoya Kanazawa

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Susumu Minami

    Univ of Tokyo

  • Takashi Koretsune

    Tohoku Univ., Tohoku University, Department of Physics, Tohoku University, Tohoku Univ

  • Ryotaro Arita

    Univ of Tokyo, University of Tokyo, Department of Applied Physics, Univ of Tokyo, CEMS, RIKEN, Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo, RIKEN-CEMS

  • Seigo Tarucha

    RIKEN

  • Michihisa Yamamoto

    RIKEN

  • Yoshinori Tokura

    RIKEN, RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science and Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo, CEMS, RIKEN, RIKEN CEMS, Univ of Tokyo, Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo