Prediction of the Weyl semimetal in the orthorhombic MoTe2
Abstract
We investigate the orthorhombic phase (Td) of layered transition-metal-dichalcogenide MoTe2 as a Weyl semimetal candidate, which was discovered to be a superconductor in our recent experiment. MoTe2 exhibits four pairs of Weyl points lying slightly ( 6 meV) above the Fermi energy in the bulk band structure. Unlike its cousin WTe2, which was predicted to be a type-II Weyl semimetal recently, the spacing between each pair of Weyl points is found to be as large as 4 percent of the reciprocal lattice in MoTe2 (six times larger than that of WTe2). When projected to the surface, Weyl points are connected by Fermi arcs, which can be easily verified by ARPES due to the large Weyl point separation. In addition, we show that the correlation effect or strain can drive MoTe2 from the type-II to type-I Weyl semimetal.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.