A flat-band-induced ferromagnetic instability in the kagome metal Sc<sub>3</sub>Mn<sub>3</sub>Al<sub>7</sub>Si<sub>5 </sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Kagome systems with rich electronic structures have become an intense research arena in the context of quantum spin liquids (QSL), charge density wave, and superconductivity. A Mn-based kagome system, Sc3Mn3Al7Si5, is proposed as an itinerant QSL via magnetic susceptibility and heat capacity measurements, and a possible ferromagnetic instability is reported with magnetization and nuclear magnetic resonance measurements [1,2]. To elucidate the ground state of this system, we conducted transport measurements of single crystals of Sc3Mn3Al7Si5 at low temperatures and high magnetic fields. The temperature dependence of resistivity at 0 T exhibits logarithmic divergence below 1 K. Magnetic fields suppress the logarithmic divergence and resistivity in high magnetic fields shows Fermi-liquid (FL) behavior. We find a scaling relation in magnetoresistance, suggesting that Sc3Mn3Al7Si5 is a ferromagnetic quantum critical metal due to flat-band-induced electron correlations and can be an exceptional example of interplay between electron correlation and topology of the underlying lattice. We will also discuss pseudogap-like behavior observed in soft-point-contact spectroscopy.



[1] H.He et al., Inorganic Chemistry 53,17 (2014)

[2] S.Samanta et al., arXiv:2304.04928

*1. C.D. and Y.N. were supported by an NSF Career DMR-1944975.2. The National High Magnetic Field Laboratory is supported by the National Science Foundation through NSF/DMR-1644779 and the State of Florida.

Presenters

  • Charuni Dissanayake

    • University of Central Florida

Authors

  • Charuni Dissanayake

    • University of Central Florida
  • Kapila Kumarasinghe

    • University of Central Florida
  • Mark Tomlinson

    • University of Central Florida
  • Eun Sang Choi

    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
    • National High Magnetic Field Lab, Tallahassee, Florida
    • NHMFL
    • MagLab
    • Florida State University
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University
  • Yasuyuki Nakajima

    • University of Central Florida