THz range Faraday rotation in the Weyl Semimetal Candidate Co2TiGe
Abstract
The Co2 family of ferromagnetic Heusler alloys have attracted interest due to their fully spin-polarized nature, making them ideal for applications in spintronic devices. More recently, the existence of room temperature time-reversal-breaking Weyl nodes near the Fermi level was predicted and confirmed in these systems. As a result of the presence of these Weyl nodes, these systems possess a non-zero momentum space Berry curvature that can dramatically influence transport properties such as the anomalous Hall effect. One of these candidate compounds is Co2 Ti Ge. Recently, high quality molecular beam epitaxy-grown thin films of Co2 Ti Ge have become available. In this work, we present THz-range measurement of MBE-grown Co2 Ti Ge films. We measure the THz-range Faraday rotation, which can be understood as a measure of the anomalous Hall effect. We supplement this work with electronic band structure calculations showing that the principal contribution to the anomalous Hall effect in the this material stems from the Berry curvature of the material. Our work shows that this class of Heusler materials shows promise for Weyl semimetal based spintronics.
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.