Kirschbaum, D. M., Lužnik, M., Le Roy, G., & Paschen, S. (2024). How to identify and characterize strongly correlated topological semimetals. JPhys Materials, 7(1), Article 012003. https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7639/ad0f30
strongly correlated electron systems; Weyl-Kondo semimetals; Solid State Physics; topological semimetals; nonlinear Hall effect
en
Abstract:
How strong correlations and topology interplay is a topic of great current interest. In this perspective paper, we focus on correlation-driven gapless phases. We take the time-reversal symmetric Weyl semimetal as an example because it is expected to have clear (albeit nonquantized) topological signatures in the Hall response and because the first strongly correlated representative, the noncentrosymmetric Weyl–Kondo semimetal Ce3Bi4Pd3, has recently been discovered. We summarize its key characteristics and use them to construct a prototype Weyl–Kondo semimetal temperature-magnetic field phase diagram. This allows for a substantiated assessment of other Weyl–Kondo semimetal candidate materials. We also put forward scaling plots of the intrinsic Berry-curvature-induced Hall response vs the inverse Weyl velocity—a measure of correlation strength, and vs the inverse charge carrier concentration—a measure of the proximity of Weyl nodes to the Fermi level. They suggest that the topological Hall response is maximized by strong correlations and small carrier concentrations. We hope that our work will guide the search for new Weyl–Kondo semimetals and correlated topological semimetals in general, and also trigger new theoretical work.
en
Project title:
Quantum phase transitions and collective modes: I 5868-N (FWF - Österr. Wissenschaftsfonds) Zentrum für korrelierte Quantenmaterialien und festkörperbasierte Quantensysteme: F 86 (FWF - Österr. Wissenschaftsfonds) Europäische Mikrokelvin Plattform: 824109 (European Commission) Correlation-driven metallic topology: 101055088 (European Commission)
-
Project (external):
US National Science Foundation
-
Project ID:
NSF PHY-1748958
-
Research Areas:
Special and Engineering Materials: 40% Quantum Many-body Systems Physics: 60%