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Rare-earth monopnictides: Family of antiferromagnets hosting magnetic Fermi arcs

ORAL

Abstract

Since the discovery of topological insulators a great deal of research effort has been devoted to magnetic topological materials, in which nontrivial spin properties can be controlled by magnetic fields, culminating in a wealth of fundamental phenomena and possible applications. The main focus was on ferromagnetic materials that can host Weyl fermions and therefore spin-textured Fermi arcs. The recent discovery of Fermi arcs and new magnetic band splitting in the antiferromagnet (AFM) NdBi has opened up new avenues for exploration. We show that these uncharted effects are not restricted to this specific compound, but also emerge in CeBi and NdSb when they undergo paramagnetic to AFM transition. Also, the relative intensity of the new bands and splitting of these bands scale with the magnetic moments of the rare-earth elements. Our data show that the Fermi arcs in NdSb have twofold symmetry, leading to strong anisotropy that may enhance effects of spin textures on transport properties.

Publication: Y. Kushnirenko, et al., Phys. Rev. B 106, 115112 (2022)<br>B. Schrunk, et al., Nature 603, 610 (2022).

Presenters

  • Yevhen Kushnirenko

    Ames Laboratory

Authors

  • Yevhen Kushnirenko

    Ames Laboratory

  • Benjamin Schrunk

    Ames Laboratory

  • Brinda Kuthanazhi

    Iowa State University

  • Lin-Lin Wang

    Ames National Laboratory, Ames Lab

  • Junyeong Ahn

    Harvard University

  • Evan O'Leary

    Iowa State University

  • Andrew Eaton

    Iowa State University

  • Sergey L Budko

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory/Iowa State University

  • Robert-Jan Slager

    Univ of Cambridge, University of Cambridge

  • Paul C Canfield

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory, Ames National Laboratory/Iowa State University

  • Adam Kaminski

    Iowa State University