Surprisingly large anomalous Hall effect and giant negative magnetoresistance in half-topological semimetals

Abstract

Large intrinsic anomalous Hall effect (AHE) due to the Berry curvature in magnetic topological semimetals is attracting enormous interest due to its fundamental importance and technological relevance. Mechanisms resulting in large intrinsic AHE include diverging Berry curvature in Weyl semimetals, anticrossing nodal rings or points of non-trivial bands, and noncollinear spin structures. Here we show that a half-topological semimetal (HTS) state near a topological critical point can provide a new mechanism for driving an exceptionally large AHE. We reveal this through a systematic experimental and theoretical study of the antiferromagnetic (AFM) half-Heusler compound TbPdBi. We not only observed an unusual AHE with a surprisingly large anomalous Hall angle H (tan H ~ 2, the largest among the antiferromagnets) in its field-driven ferromagnetic (FM) phase, but also found a distinct Hall resistivity peak in the canted AFM phase within a low field range, where its isothermal magnetization is nearly linearly dependent on the field. Moreover, we observed a nearly isotropic, giant negative magnetoresistance with a magnitude of ~98%. Our in-depth theoretical modelling demonstrates that these exotic transport properties originate from the HTS state. A minimal Berry curvature cancellation between the trivial spin-up and nontrivial spin-down bands results not only in an extremely large AHE, but it also enhances the spin polarization of the spin-down bands substantially and thus leads to a giant negative magnetoresistance. Our study advances the understanding of the interplay between band topology and magnetism and offers new clues for materials design for spintronics and other applications.

0

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.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…