Field-antisymmetric currents in the ferromagnetic MnSb<sub>2</sub>Te<sub>4</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Recent realizations of the nontrivial quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) and axion insulator states in intrinsic topological magnets of the Mn(Bi,Sb)2Te4 class made it apparent that when long-range magnetism and band topology combine the consequences of ubiquitous disorder can be particularly acute and yet surprising. Here, we tap into a pre-existing Sb/Mn interchange (antisite) disorder landscape in the ferromagnetic MnSb2Te4 (FM MST) by implementing the post-growth hydrogen intake-and-release technique we have recently developed [1]. This transforms a conventional field-symmetric longitudinal magnetoresistance Rxx (H) for H||c (MR) of the as-grown MST (FM1) into a field-antisymmetric MR (FAMR) in the hydrogen-altered FM2, with a doubled Curie temperature of ~50 K. We demonstrate that FAMR directly translates into a giant field-antisymmetric planar Hall effect (PHE) for H||ab, characteristic of a Weyl semimetal topological bandstructure in which strong antisymmetry of the chiral-anomaly driven in-plane is massively amplified at low fields. Our studies of magnetotransport for H||ab under the in-plane field rotation (angle φ) reveal that it exhibits angular (±φ) chirality, which when enhanced by hydrogenation drives the field-antisymmetric chiral currents for H||c. A strong hydrogen-tunable chirality amplification of the PHE in FM2 and the appearance of an unusual in-plane hysteresis loop will be presented and implications for the bandstructure tunability will be discussed.





[1] H. Deng et al, Nature Comms. 13, 2308 (2022).



Acknowledgement: NSF-DMR-2011738 and NSF-HRD-2112550.

Presenters

  • Entela Buzi

    • The Graduate Center - CUNY
    • The City College of New York - CUNY

Authors

  • Entela Buzi

    • The Graduate Center - CUNY
    • The City College of New York - CUNY
  • Afrin Nahar Tamanna

    • The City College of New York
  • Ayesha Lakra

    • The City College of New York
  • Xiaxin Ding

    • City College of New York
  • Kyungwha Park

    • Virginia Tech
  • Lia Krusin-Elbaum

    • The City College of New York