Observation of spiral spin order and A-phase in Weyl semimetal SmAlSi

ORAL

Abstract

The role of Weyl electrons in magnetism has drawn great attention recently. Previous work on NdAlSi [1] has shown a minor spiral modulation of spins, which could be due to nesting between the Weyl nodes; however, a fully spiral order has not been observed. We present evidence of a spiral magnetic order in SmAlSi induced by Weyl-mediated RKKY interactions [2]. We highlight the role of structural symmetries, nesting between the Weyl nodes, and magneto-crysgtalline anisotropy in the spiral magnetic state of SmAlSi. Furthermore, we map the phase diagram, observe a large topological hall effect (THE) within the A-phase, and show that its angle dependence is consistent with the Weyl-mediated DM interactions. Specifically, we show that the angle dependence of THE is consistent with a considerable helical component of the spiral order in SmAlSi as expected from Weyl-mediated RKKY interactions [3].

[1] Gaudet, Jonathan, et al. "Weyl-mediated helical magnetism in NdAlSi." Nature Materials 20, 1650-1656 (2021)

[2] P. Nikolic, Physical Review B 103, 155151 (2021).

[3] X. Yao, J. Gaudet, et al, https://arxiv.org/abs/2206.05121

*The work at Boston College was funded by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research under grant number FA-2386-21-1-4059.

Publication: X. Yao, J. Gaudet, et al, https://arxiv.org/abs/2206.05121

Presenters

  • Xiaohan Yao

    • Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, 02467, USA

Authors

  • Xiaohan Yao

    • Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, 02467, USA
  • Jonathan Gaudet

    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Predrag Nikolic

    • George Mason University
  • David E Graf

    • Florida State University
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and Department of Physics, Florida State University
  • Fazel Tafti

    • Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts 02467, USA
    • Department of Physics, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, 02467, USA