Strongly correlated itinerant magnetism on the boundary of superconductivity in a magnetic transition metal dichalcogenide

Abstract

Metallic ferromagnets with strongly interacting electrons often exhibit remarkable electronic phases such as ferromagnetic superconductivity, complex spin textures, and nontrivial topology. In this report, we discuss the synthesis of a layered magnetic metal NiTa4Se8 (or Ni1/4TaSe2) with a Curie temperature of 58 Kelvin. Magnetization data and ab initio calculations indicate that the nickel atoms host uniaxial ferromagnetic order of about 0.7μB per atom, while an even smaller moment is generated in the itinerant tantalum conduction electrons. Strong correlations are evident in flat bands near the Fermi level, a high heat capacity coefficient, and a high Kadowaki-Woods ratio. When the system is diluted of magnetic ions, the samples become superconducting below about 2 Kelvin. Remarkably, electron and hole Fermi surfaces are associated with opposite spin polarization. We discuss the implications of this feature on the superconductivity that emerges near itinerant ferromagnetism in this material, including the possibility of spin-polarized superconductivity.

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