Spin texture of a quasi-two-dimensional ferromagnetic kagome metal
ORAL
Abstract
The discovery of low dimensional, long range magnetic order and the study on accurate control of such order have led to the revolution of magnetic storage devices that reformed our daily lives. Two dimensional systems with underlying kagome symmetry is found to be one of the most convenient platforms for the creation and manipulation of various magnetic structures. For example, planar ferromagnetism and non-colinear antiferromagnetism are present in kagome metals Fe3Sn2 and Mn3Sn, respectively, both of which are also recently found to be topologically nontrivial. In this talk, we report our study on the spin texture of Fe3Sn2, using both spin-resolved ARPES and DFT calculations. Our results show that the topological Dirac bands at the K points of Fe3Sn2 originates from inner layers of the crystal, and are highly spin-polarized along a single spatial direction, realizing in-plane ferromagnetism. This study reveals the low-lying spin texture of a two dimensional topological metal, serving as guidence for spintronic applications on systems alike.
*This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) (No. 11504159), NSFC Guangdong (No. 2016A030313650), and the Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality (No. JCYJ20150630145302240).
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Presenters
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Chang Liu
- Physics, Southern University of Science and Technology