Fermiology of a topological, intercalated transition metal dichalcogenide compound
ORAL
Abstract
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are known to have various phases such as charge density waves, superconductivity and Mott insulating phases. Here, we study the electronic structure of a transition metal dichalcogenide intercalated by triangular layers of Co atoms using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. The measured Fermi surfaces after intercalation are different from pristine compounds and cannot be explained by a simple rigid band shift. Interestingly, recently a large anomalous hall effect (AHE) was observed in this family [1]. We found that AHE values can change signs with different intercalation levels. We utilize ARPES to track the Fermi level shifting with different dopings. Our study suggests the possibility of a tunable AHE system. Temperature dependence measurement also reveals how band structure changes across the magnetic transition. Finally, we conduct photon energy dependence to demonstrate the nontrivial band crossing. Our ARPES study indicates that this intercalated TMD compound hosts rich physics such as magnetism, tunable AHE and nontrivial band topology.
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Publication: [1] N.J.Ghimire et al. Nat. Commun 9, 3280 (2018).
Presenters
Xian Yang
Princeton University
Authors
Xian Yang
Princeton University
Zijia Cheng
Princeton University, Laboratory for Topological Quantum Matter and Advanced Spectroscopy (B7), Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.
Tyler A Cochran
Princeton University
Hari Bhandari
George Mason University
Harrison LaBollita
Arizona State University
Ilya Belopolski
RIKEN, Princeton University
Antia S Botana
Arizona State University
Nirmal Ghimire
George Mason University, Quantum Science and Engineering Center, Department of Physics and Astronomy-George Mason University, Quantum Science and Engineering Center, Department of Physics and Astronomy - George Mason University
Zahid M Hasan
Princeton University, Laboratory for Topological Quantum Matter and Advanced Spectroscopy (B7), Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.