Topological phase transition induced extreme magnetoresistance in TaSb2
Abstract
We report extremely large positive magnetoresistance of 1.72 million percent in single crystal TaSb2 at moderate conditions of 1.5 K and 15 T. The quadratic growth of magnetoresistance (MR \,B1.96) is not saturating up to 15 T, a manifestation of nearly perfect compensation with <0.1\% mismatch between electron and hole pockets in this semimetal. The compensation mechanism is confirmed by temperature-dependent MR, Hall and thermoelectric coefficients of Nernst and Seebeck, revealing two pronounced Fermi surface reconstruction processes without spontaneous symmetry breaking, i.e. Lifshitz transitions, at around 20 K and 60 K, respectively. Using quantum oscillations of magnetoresistance and magnetic susceptibility, supported by density-functional theory calculations, we determined that the main hole Fermi surface of TaSb2 forms a unique shoulder structure along the F-L line. The flat band top of this shoulder pocket is just a few meV above the Fermi level, leading to the observed topological phase transition at 20 K when the shoulder pocket disappears. Further increase in temperature pushes the Fermi level to the band top of the main hole pocket, induced the second Lifshitz transition at 60 K when hole pocket vanishes completely.
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