Physical properties and first-principles calculations of an altermagnet candidate Cs1-δV2Te2O

Abstract

We report the crystal growth, structure, physical properties, and first-principles calculations of a vanadium-based oxytelluride Cs1-δV2Te2O. The material possesses two-dimensional V2O square nets sandwiched by tellurium layers, with local crystallographic symmetry satisfying the spin symmetry for a d-wave altermagnet. An antiferromagnetic transition at 293 K is unambiguously evidenced from the measurements of magnetic susceptibility and specific heat. In addition, a secondary transition at 70 K is also observed, possibly associated with a Lifshitz transition. The first-principles calculations indicate robust N\'eel-type collinear antiferromagnetism in the V2O plane. Consequently, spin splittings show up in momentum space, in relation with the real-space mirror/rotation symmetry. Interestingly, the V-dyz/dxz electrons, which primarily contribute the quasi-one-dimensional Fermi surface, turns out to be fully orbital- and spin-polarized, akin to the case of a half metal. Our work lays a solid foundation on the potential applications utilizing altermagnetic properties in vanadium-based oxychalcogenides.

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