Magnetic field tuning of the valley population in the Weyl phase of Nd<sub>2</sub>Ir<sub>2</sub>O<sub>7</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
Materials hosting Dirac valleys serve as promising candidates for novel electronic devices. Valley polarization, the population control of distinguishable valleys, is yet the most formidable challenge in this area. The frustrated magnet Nd2Ir2O7, where strong correlations together with spin-orbit coupling play a crucial role, is predicted to be a Weyl semimetal and to host topological pairs of bulk Dirac-like valleys. Here we use an external magnetic field to manipulate the localized rare earth 4f moments coupled to the 5d electronic bands. Low energy optical spectroscopy reveals that a field of only a few teslas suffices to create charge compensating pockets of holes and electrons in different regions of momentum space, thus introducing a valley population shift that can be tuned with the field. This demonstrates that rare earth elements can act as boosters of an external magnetic field, making these materials good candidates for ``valleytronics" devices.
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Presenters
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Itzik Kapon
Univ of Geneva
Authors
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Itzik Kapon
Univ of Geneva
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Willem Rischau
Univ of Geneva
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Bastien Michon
University of Geneva
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Kai Wang
University of Geneva
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Bing Xu
Department of Physics and Fribourg Center for Nanomaterials,, University of Fribourg, University of Fribourg
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Qiu Yang
University of Tokyo
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Satoru Nakatsuji
Univ of Tokyo-Kashiwanoha, Department of Physics, University of Tokyo, The University of Tokyo, University of Tokyo, Japan, Univ of Tokyo, Dept. of Phys. Univ. of Tokyo
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Dirk Van Der Marel
Univ of Geneva, University of Geneva