Colossal anomalous Hall conductivity in half-metallic material Fe-doped CoS<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

While it is well-established that the intrinsic anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) arises from Berry curvature (BC) induced by spin-orbit gapped band anti-crossing, reported AHC values typically fall within the range of 100 to 1000 Ω-1cm-1. The primary reason for the often modest AHC lies in the cancellation of BC sources in the momentum space. This study delves into the AHC of cobalt disulfides (CoS2), revealing resonant behavior as the chemical potential approaches the middle of the gap through varying Fe-doping levels. Co0.95Fe0.05S2, in particular, exhibits a resonant peak of 2507 Ω-1cm-1, more than four times larger than that of CoS2. Our density functional theory and tight-binding analyses trace this substantial AHC to four spin-polarized massive Dirac dispersions in the kz = 0 plane of the Brillouin zone, positioned just below the Fermi level. The observed colossal AHC stems from the four BC sources, a consequence of d-wave-like spin-orbit coupling among spin-polarized eg orbitals with the same sign, preventing cancellation. This result unveils the mechanism behind the significantly tunable AHC in CoS2 and provides insights into a strategy for identifying similar materials.

Presenters

  • Joonyoung Choi

    • Department of Physics, Kyungpook National University

Authors

  • Joonyoung Choi

    • Department of Physics, Kyungpook National University
  • Jin-Hong Park

    • Research Center for Novel Epitaxial Quantum Architectures, Department of Physics, Seoul National University
  • Wonshik Kyung

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Seoul National University
  • Mi Kyung Kim

    • Department of Physics, Yonsei University
  • Changyoung Kim

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Seoul National University
    • SNU
  • Jun-Won Rhim

    • Department of Physics, Ajou University
  • Se Young Park

    • Department of Physics and Origin of Matter and Evolution of Galaxies (OMEG) Institute, Soongsil University
  • Younjung Jo

    • Department of Physics, Kyungpook National University