Experimental tests of the chiral anomaly magnetoresistance in the Dirac-Weyl semimetals Na3Bi and GdPtBi

Abstract

In the Dirac/Weyl semimetal, the chiral anomaly appears as an "axial" current arising from charge-pumping between the lowest (chiral) Landau levels of the Weyl nodes, when an electric field is applied parallel to a magnetic field B. Evidence for the chiral anomaly was obtained from the longitudinal magnetoresistance (LMR) in Na3Bi and GdPtBi. However, current jetting effects (focussing of the current density J) have raised general concerns about LMR experiments. Here we implement a litmus test that allows the intrinsic LMR in Na3Bi and GdPtBi to be sharply distinguished from pure current jetting effects (in pure Bi). Current jetting enhances J along the mid-ridge (spine) of the sample while decreasing it at the edge. We measure the distortion by comparing the local voltage drop at the spine (expressed as the resistance Rspine) with that at the edge (Redge). In Bi, Rspine sharply increases with B but Redge decreases (jetting effects are dominant). However, in Na3Bi and GdPtBi, both Rspine and Redge decrease (jetting effects are subdominant). A numerical simulation allows the jetting distortions to be removed entirely. We find that the intrinsic longitudinal resistivity xx(B) in Na3Bi decreases by a factor of 10.9 between B = 0 and 10 T. A second litmus test is obtained from the parametric plot of the planar angular magnetoresistance. These results strenghthen considerably the evidence for the intrinsic nature of the chiral-anomaly induced LMR. We briefly discuss how the squeeze test may be extended to test ZrTe5.

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