Control of Polarity in Kagome-NiAs Bismuthides

POSTER

Abstract

Kagome materials have attracted considerable attention due to the intrinsic properties such as flat bands, Dirac points and quantum magnetic frustration. Here, we report several new NiAs-type bismuthide materials in which the coupled formation of vacancies and interstitials generates kagome transition metal layers, which can further compositionally tuned towards breaking of inversion symmetry to give polar materials. A superstructure of the P63/mmc NiAs structure is reported in which kagome nets are stabilized in the octahedral transition metal layers of the compounds Ni0.7Pd0.2Bi, Ni0.6Pt0.4Bi, and Mn0.99Pd0.01Bi. The ordered vacancies that yield the true hexagonal kagome motif lead to filling of trigonal bipyramidal interstitial sites with the transition metal in this family of “kagome-NiAs” type materials. Further ordering of vacancies within these interstitial layers can be compositionally driven to simultaneously yield kagome-connected layers and a net polarization along the c axis in Ni0.9Bi and Ni0.79Pd0.08Bi, which adopt polar Fmm2 symmetry. Interestingly, the polar Ni0.9Bi exhibits an unconventional electronic transport, in contrast with the conventional metallic behavior of the non-polar members of this materials family, pointing to potentially extensive compositional control of structure and properties in a chemistry that affords the intensely studied kagome nets. This research demonstrates the ability to combine the important structural motifs and selectively break or maintain important crystallographic symmetries in the kagome-NiAs bismuthide family, which will stimulate extensive searches for new or polar kagome materials and associate studies of their physical properties, with ramifications for the control and understanding of electronic structure in the solid state.

*This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) under EP/V026887.

Presenters

  • HAI LIN

    • University of Liverpool

Authors

  • HAI LIN

    • University of Liverpool
  • Quinn Gibson

    • University of Aberdeen
  • Dongsheng Wen

    • University of Liverpool
  • Marco Zanella

    • University of Liverpool
  • Luke Daniels

    • University of Liverpool
  • Craig Robertson

    • University of Liverpool
  • John Claridge

    • University of Liverpool
  • Jonathan Alaria

    • University of Liverpool
  • Matthew Dyer

    • University of Liverpool
  • Matthew Rosseinsky

    • University of Liverpool