Observation of a spontaneous anomalous Hall response in the Mn5Si3 d-wave altermagnet candidate

Author:

Reichlova HelenaORCID,Lopes Seeger Rafael,González-Hernández Rafael,Kounta Ismaila,Schlitz RichardORCID,Kriegner DominikORCID,Ritzinger PhilippORCID,Lammel MichaelaORCID,Leiviskä Miina,Birk Hellenes AnnaORCID,Olejník Kamil,Petřiček VaclavORCID,Doležal Petr,Horak LukasORCID,Schmoranzerova Eva,Badura AntonínORCID,Bertaina SylvainORCID,Thomas AndyORCID,Baltz VincentORCID,Michez Lisa,Sinova Jairo,Goennenwein Sebastian T. B.ORCID,Jungwirth TomášORCID,Šmejkal LiborORCID

Abstract

AbstractPhases with spontaneous time-reversal ($${{{{{{{\mathcal{T}}}}}}}}$$ T ) symmetry breaking are sought after for their anomalous physical properties, low-dissipation electronic and spin responses, and information-technology applications. Recently predicted altermagnetic phase features an unconventional and attractive combination of a strong $${{{{{{{\mathcal{T}}}}}}}}$$ T -symmetry breaking in the electronic structure and a zero or only weak-relativistic magnetization. In this work, we experimentally observe the anomalous Hall effect, a prominent representative of the $${{{{{{{\mathcal{T}}}}}}}}$$ T -symmetry breaking responses, in the absence of an external magnetic field in epitaxial thin-film Mn5Si3 with a vanishingly small net magnetic moment. By symmetry analysis and first-principles calculations we demonstrate that the unconventional d-wave altermagnetic phase is consistent with the experimental structural and magnetic characterization of the Mn5Si3 epilayers, and that the theoretical anomalous Hall conductivity generated by the phase is sizable, in agreement with experiment. An analogy with unconventional d-wave superconductivity suggests that our identification of a candidate of unconventional d-wave altermagnetism points towards a new chapter of research and applications of magnetic phases.

Funder

Elasto-Q- Mat

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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