353 research outputs found
SmO thin films: a flexible route to correlated flat bands with nontrivial topology
Using density functional theory based calculations, we show that the
correlated mixed-valent compound SmO is a 3D strongly topological semi-metal as
a result of a 4-5 band inversion at the X point. The [001] surface Bloch
spectral density reveals two weakly interacting Dirac cones that are
quasi-degenerate at the M_bar-point and another single Dirac cone at the
Gamma_bar-point. We also show that the topological non-triviality in SmO is
very robust and prevails for a wide range of lattice parameters, making it an
ideal candidate to investigate topological nontrivial correlated flat bands in
thin-film form. Moreover, the electron filling is tunable by strain. In
addition, we find conditions for which the inversion is of the 4f-6s type,
making SmO to be a rather unique system. The similarities of the crystal
symmetry and the lattice constant of SmO to the well studied ferromagnetic
semiconductor EuO, makes SmO/EuO thin film interfaces an excellent contender
towards realizing the quantum anomalous Hall effect in a strongly correlated
electron system.Comment: Paper+supplemen
Insulating state and the importance of the spin-orbit coupling in CaCoRhO
We have carried out a comparative theoretical study of the electronic
structure of the novel one-dimensional CaCoRhO and CaFeRhO
systems. The insulating antiferromagnetic state for the CaFeRhO can be
well explained by band structure calculations with the closed shell high-spin
(Fe) and low-spin (Rh) configurations. We
found for the CaCoRhO that the Co has a strong tendency to be
(Co) rather than (Co), and that there is an orbital
degeneracy in the local Co electronic structure. We argue that it is the
spin-orbit coupling which will lift this degeneracy thereby enabling local spin
density approximation + Hubbard U (LSDA+U) band structure calculations to
generate the band gap. We predict that the orbital contribution to the magnetic
moment in CaCoRhO is substantial, i.e. significantly larger than 1
per formula unit. Moreover, we propose a model for the contrasting
intra-chain magnetism in both materials.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, and 1 tabl
Verwey transition in FeO thin films: Influence of oxygen stoichiometry and substrate-induced microstructure
We have carried out a systematic experimental investigation to address the
question why thin films of FeO (magnetite) generally have a very broad
Verwey transition with lower transition temperatures as compared to the bulk.
We observed using x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, x-ray diffraction and
resistivity measurements that the Verwey transition in thin films is
drastically influenced not only by the oxygen stoichiometry but especially also
by the substrate-induced microstructure. In particular, we found (1) that the
transition temperature, the resistivity jump, and the conductivity gap of fully
stoichiometric films greatly depends on the domain size, which increases
gradually with increasing film thickness, (2) that the broadness of the
transition scales with the width of the domain size distribution, and (3) that
the hysteresis width is affected strongly by the presence of antiphase
boundaries. Films grown on MgO (001) substrates showed the highest and sharpest
transitions, with a 200 nm film having a T of 122K, which is close to the
bulk value. Films grown on substrates with large lattice constant mismatch
revealed very broad transitions, and yet, all films show a transition with a
hysteresis behavior, indicating that the transition is still first order rather
than higher order.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Nature of magnetism in CaCoO
We find using LSDA+U band structure calculations that the novel
one-dimensional cobaltate CaCoO is not a ferromagnetic half-metal
but a Mott insulator. Both the octahedral and the trigonal Co ions are formally
trivalent, with the octahedral being in the low-spin and the trigonal in the
high-spin state. The inclusion of the spin-orbit coupling leads to the
occupation of the minority-spin orbital for the unusually coordinated
trigonal Co, producing a giant orbital moment (1.57 ). It also results
in an anomalously large magnetocrystalline anisotropy (of order 70 meV),
elucidating why the magnetism is highly Ising-like. The role of the oxygen
holes, carrying an induced magnetic moment of 0.13 per oxygen, for
the exchange interactions is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, and 1 tabl
Strong spin-orbit coupling effects on the Fermi surface of Sr2RuO4 and Sr2RhO4
We present a first-principle study of spin-orbit coupling effects on the
Fermi surface of Sr2RuO4 and Sr2RhO4. For nearly degenerate bands, spin-orbit
coupling leads to a dramatic change of the Fermi surface with respect to
non-relativistic calculations; as evidenced by the comparison with experiments
on Sr2RhO4, it cannot be disregarded. For Sr2RuO4, the Fermi surface
modifications are more subtle but equally dramatic in the detail: spin-orbit
coupling induces a strong momentum dependence, normal to the RuO2 planes, for
both orbital and spin character of the low-energy electronic states. These
findings have profound implications for the understanding of unconventional
superconductivity in Sr2RuO4.Comment: A high-resolution version can be found at
http://www.physics.ubc.ca/~quantmat/ARPES/PUBLICATIONS/Articles/SO_Sr2RuO4.pd
Hybridization gap and Fano resonance in SmB
We present results of Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Spectroscopy (STS)
measurements on the "Kondo insulator" SmB. The vast majority of surface
areas investigated was reconstructed but, infrequently, also patches of varying
size of non-reconstructed, Sm- or B-terminated surfaces were found. On the
smallest patches, clear indications for the hybridization gap and
inter-multiplet transitions were observed. On non-reconstructed surface areas
large enough for coherent co-tunneling we were able to observe clear-cut Fano
resonances. Our locally resolved STS indicated considerable finite conductance
on all surfaces independent of their structure.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Importance of tetrahedral coordination for high-valent transition metal oxides: YCrO as a model system
We have investigated the electronic structure of the high oxidation state
material YCrO within the framework of the Zaanen-Sawatzky-Allen phase
diagram. While Cr-based compounds like SrCrO/CaCrO and CrO
can be classified as small-gap or metallic negative-charge-transfer systems, we
find using photoelectron spectroscopy that YCrO is a robust insulator
despite the fact that its Cr ions have an even higher formal valence state of
5+. We reveal using band structure calculations that the tetrahedral
coordination of the Cr ions in YCrO plays a decisive role, namely to
diminish the bonding of the Cr states with the top of the O valence
band. This finding not only explains why the charge-transfer energy remains
effectively positive and the material stable, but also opens up a new route to
create doped carriers with symmetries different from those of other
transition-metal ions.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Electronic and magnetic properties of the kagome systems YBaCo4O7 and YBaCo3MO7 (M=Al, Fe)
We present a combined experimental and theoretical x-ray absorption
spectroscopy (XAS) study of the new class of cobaltates YBaCo4O7 and YBaCo3MO7
(M= Al, Fe). The focus is on the local electronic and magnetic properties of
the transition metal ions in these geometrically frustrated kagome compounds.
For the mixed valence cobaltate YBaCo4O7, both the Co2+ and Co3+ are found to
be in the high spin state. The stability of these high spin states in
tetrahedral coordination is compared with those in the more studied case of
octahedral coordination. For the new compound YBaCo3FeO7, we find exclusively
Co2+ and Fe3+ as charge states
Disorder-driven electronic localization and phase separation in superconducting Fe1+yTe0.5Se0.5 single crystals
We have investigated the influence of Fe-excess on the electrical transport
and magnetism of Fe1+yTe0.5Se0.5 (y=0.04 and 0.09) single crystals. Both
compositions exhibit resistively determined superconducting transitions (Tc)
with an onset temperature of about 15 K. From the width of the superconducting
transition and the magnitude of the lower critical field Hc1, it is inferred
that excess of Fe suppresses superconductivity. The linear and non-linear
responses of the ac-susceptibility show that the superconducting state for
these compositions is inhomogeneous. A possible origin of this phase separation
is a magnetic coupling between Fe-excess occupying interstitial sites in the
chalcogen planes and those in the Fe-square lattice. The temperature derivative
of the resistivity drho/dT in the temperature range Tc < T < Ta with Ta being
the temperature of a magnetic anomaly, changes from positive to negative with
increasing Fe. A log 1/T divergence of the resistivity above Tc in the sample
with higher amount of Fe suggests a disorder driven electronic localization.Comment: 7 page
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