Electronic band structure of the Co pnictide A(CoX)<sub>2</sub> (A=Ca, Eu and X=As, P) probed by ARPES

ORAL

Abstract

The pnictide family of transition metals is being widely studied for emergence of new collective quantum states. In the iron-family, the suppression of the antiferromagnet order is accompanied with the emergence of superconductivity [1] and the Ni-based family has been demonstrated to show an electronic liquid nematic ground state [2]. The Co-pnictide family (ACo2X2, A=Ba,Ca,Eu,... X=As,P) has been discussed in the framework of itinerant magnetism of conducting electrons and non-Fermi liquid scenarios. Besides, some of these Co-pnictides have been predicted to be topological Weyl semimetals where the low-energy excitations are Weyl fermions [3]. The experimental observation of these surface states gives an unequivocal proof that a particular compound is a Weyl semimetal [4]. Here, by means of ARPES and DFT, we report the experimental and theoretical band structure of the magnetic Co-pnictide ACo2X2 (A = Ca, Eu and X = As, P). We address the role of the dimensionality, disorder and the possible observation of topological physics.

[1] David C. Johnston. Advances in Physics, 2010.

[2] Y. Yao et al., Nature Comm. 13, 4535 (2022)

[3] Yuanfeng, Xu et al., Nature, 586, 702-707 (2020).

[4] Su-Yang Xu et al., Science, 349, 613-617 (2015).

Presenters

  • Antonio David Subires Santana

    • Donostia International Physics Center

Authors

  • Antonio David Subires Santana

    • Donostia International Physics Center
  • Mikel García Díez

    • University of the Basque Country UPV/EH
  • Lorea Sánchez Fernández

    • Donostia International Physics Center
  • Gerardina Carbone

    • MAX IV Laboratory
  • Turgut Yilmaz

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Elio Vescovo

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory
    • Brookhaven National Lab
  • Michael Shatruk

    • Florida State University
  • Maia Garcia Vergniory

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids, Dresden, Germany
    • Donostia International Physics Center, P. Manuel de Lardizabal 4, 20018 Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain
    • Donostia International Physics Center and Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
    • Max Planck Institute CPFS
    • Donostia International Physics Center
  • Santiago Blanco-Canosa

    • Donostia International Physics Center