54 research outputs found

    Topological Phase with Critical-Type Nodal Line State in Intermetallic CaPd

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    In recent years, realizing new topological phase of matter has been a hot topic in the fields of physics and materials science. Topological semimetals and metals can conventionally be classified into two types: type-I and type-II according to the tilting degree of the fermion cone. Here, it is the first time to report a new topological metal phase with the critical-type nodal line between type-I and type-II nodal line. The critical-type nodal line shows a unique nontrivial band crossing which is composed of a at band and a dispersive band and leads to a new fermionic state. We propose intermetallic CaPd can be an existing topological metal for the new fermionic state, characterized with critical-type nodal line in the bulk and drumhead band structure on the surface. Our work not only promotes the concept of critical-type nodal line, but also provides the material realization to study its exotic properties in future experiments

    Ideal inner nodal chain semimetals in Li2XY (X = Ca, Ba; Y = Si, Ge) materials

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    The chain-type nodal loops in the reciprocal space can generate exotic nodal chain fermions. Here, we report that Li2XY (X = Ca, Ba; Y = Si, Ge) compounds are ideal inner nodal chain semimetals. Their band structures are composed of two connecting nodal loops with either hybrid or type-I band dispersion. The signatures of the nodal chain, such as the nontrivial surface states, are quite pronounced in these Li2XY compounds since there is only a single inner nodal chain without other extraneous bands near the Fermi level. These compounds are existing materials and ambient-stable, which is available to realize the experimental detection of inner nodal chain fermions or further the practical applications.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Mn2C monolayer: hydrogenation/oxygenation induced strong room-temperature ferromagnetism and potential applications

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    Two-dimensional ferromagnetic materials with strong ferromagnetism and high Curie temperature are significantly desired for the applications of nanoscale devices. Here, based on first-principles computations, we report hydrogenated/oxygenated Mn2C monolayer is a such material with strong room-temperature ferromagnetism. The bare Mn2C monolayer is an antiferromagnetic metal with the local magnetic moment of Mn ~ 3{\mu}B. However, the antiferromagnetic coupling of Mn atoms can transform into the ferromagnetic order under hydrogenation/oxygenation. Especially, the magnetic moments in hydrogenated/oxygenated Mn2C monolayer can be as large as 6 {\mu}B per unit cell, and the Curie temperatures are above 290K. Beside the potential applications in spintronic devices, our work suggests that Mn2C monolayer is also promising to be used in hydrogen/oxygen detection and removal devices

    Observation of unconventional six-fold, four-fold and three-fold excitations in rare-earth-metal carbide Re2C3

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    Unconventional fermions, such as three-fold, four-fold, six-fold, and eight-fold fermions have attracted intense attention in recent years. However, the concrete materials hosting unconventional fermions are still in urgent scarcity. In this work, based first-principle calculations and symmetry analysis, we reveal rich unconventional fermions in existing compound Re2C3 (Re = Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu). We show that these compounds host quadratic dispersive three-fold (TP), linear dispersive four-fold (FP) and six-fold points (SP) near the Fermi level in their electric band structures when spin-orbital coupling (SOC) is not included. Notably, the FP is charge-2 Dirac-like point. More importantly, among compound Re2C3, the compound Yb2C3 has very clean band structure, and its unconventional fermions are closed to the Fermi level. We also find that a uniaxial strain can transform the unconventional fermions into other types fermions, depending on the directions of strain. When SOC is considered, a SP transform to an eightfold degenerate point and a fourfold degenerate point. Overall, our work provides a family of realistic materials to study the unconventional fermions

    A Record-High Ion Storage Capacity of T-Graphene as Two-Dimensional Anode Material for Li-ion and Na-ion Batteries

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    Developing applicable two-dimensional (2D) electrode materials with high performance, especially with high ion storage capacity, has become an ever more obsessive quest in recent years. Based on first-principles calculations, we report that T-graphene, a new carbon-based 2D material, has a record-high Li/Na storage capacity. The capacity of T-graphene is as high as 2233.2 mA h g-1 for Li, and can reach 2357.2 mA h g-1 for Na, which are 6 times as much as that of the commercial graphite and are the highest among 2D anode materials identified so far. We demonstrate that the ultrahigh storage capacity of T-graphene mostly benefits from its low atomic mass and special periodic lattice structure. T-graphene has not only the ultrahigh storage capacity but also hosts the stable ion adsorption, good electric conductivity, fast ion diffusion speed, and low open-circuit voltage, which are merits required as a superior anode material for Li-ion and Na-ion batteries with ultrahigh storage capacity.Comment: 4 figure

    Fully spin-polarized nodal chain state in half metal LiV2_2O4_4

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    Nodal-chain fermions, as novel topological states of matter, have been hotly discussed in non-magnetic materials. Here, by using first-principles calculations and symmetry analysis, we propose the realization of fully spin-polarized nodal chain in the half-metal state of LiV2_2O4_4 compound. The material naturally shows a ferromagnetic ground state, and takes on a half-metal band structure with only the bands from the spin-up channel present near the Fermi level. The spin-up bands cross with each other, which form two types of nodal loops. These nodal loops arise from band inversion and are under the protection of the glide mirror symmetries. Remarkably, we find the nodal loops conjunct with each other and form chain-like nodal structure. Correspondingly, the w-shaped surface states are also fully spin-polarized. The fully spin-polarized nodal chain identified here has not been proposed in realistic materials before. An effective model is constructed to describe the nature of nodal chain. The effects of the electron correlation, the lattice strains, and the spin-orbit coupling are discussed. The fully spin-polarized bulk nodal-chain and the associated nontrivial surface states for a half-metal may open novel applications in spintronics.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Fully spin-polarized double-Weyl fermions with type-III dispersion in quasi-one dimensional materials X2RhF6 (X=K, Rb, Cs)

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    Double-Weyl fermions, as novel topological states of matter, have been mostly discussed in nonmagnetic materials. Here, based on density-functional theory and symmetry analysis, we propose the realization of fully spin-polarized double-Weyl fermions in a family ferromagnetic materials X2RhF6 (X= K, Rb, Cs). These materials have the half-metal ground states, where only the bands from the spin-down channel present near the Fermi energy. The spin-down bands form a pair of triply degenerate nodal points (TDNPs) if spin-orbit coupling (SOC) is not included. Under SOC, one TDNP splits into two double-Weyl points featuring quadratic dispersion along two momentum direction, and they are protected by the three-fold rotation (C3) symmetry. Unlike most double-Weyl semimetals, the Weyl points proposed here have the type-III dispersion with one of the crossing bands being saddle-shaped. An effective model is constructed, which describes well the nature of the Weyl points. These Weyl points are fully spin-polarized, and are characterized with double Fermi arcs on the surface spectrum. Breaking C3 symmetry by lattice strain could shift one double-Weyl point into a pair of type-II single-Weyl points. The X2RhF6 materials proposed here are excellent candidates to investigate the novel properties of type-III double-Weyl fermions in ferromagnetic system, as well as generate potential applications in spintronics.Comment: 8 pages,5 figure

    Topological Nodal Line Electrides: Realization of Ideal Nodal Line State Nearly Immune from Spin-Orbit Coupling

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    Nodal line semimetals (NLSs) have attracted broad interest in current research. In most of existing NLSs, the intrinsic properties of nodal lines are greatly destroyed because nodal lines usually suffer sizable gaps induced by non-negligible spin-orbit coupling (SOC). In this work,we propose the topological nodal line electrides (TNLEs), which achieve electronic structures of nodal lines and electrides simultaneously, provide new insight on designing excellent NLSs nearly immune from SOC. Since the states near the Fermi level are most contributed by nonnucleus-bounded interstitial electrons, nodal lines in TNLEs manifest extremely small SOCinduced gap even possessing heavy elements. Especially, we propose the family of A2B (A = Ca, Sr, Ba; B= As, Sb, Bi) materials are realistic TNLEs with negligible SOC-induced gaps, which can play as excellent platforms to study the intrinsic properties of TNLE

    Structure, phase stability, half-metallicity, and fully spin-polarized Weyl states in compound NaV2O4: a new example for topological spintronic material

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    Here, we systematically investigate the structure, phase stability, half-metallicity, and topological electronic structure for a new topological spintronic material NaV2O4. The material has a tetragonal structure with excellent dynamical and thermal stabilities. It shows a half-metallic ground state, where only the spin-up bands present near the Fermi level. These bands form a Weyl nodal line close to the Fermi level, locating in the kz = 0 plane. The nodal line is robust against SOC, under the protection of the mirror symmetry. The nodal line band structure is very clean, thus the drumhead surface states can be clearly identified. Remarkably, the nodal line and drumhead surface states have the 100% spin polarization, which are highly desirable for spintronics applications. In addition, by shifting the magnetic field in-plane, we find that the Weyl nodal line can transform into single pair of Weyl nodes. The Weyl-line and Weyl-node fermions in the bulk, as well as the drumhead fermions on the surface are all fully spin-polarized, which may generate new physical properties and promising applications.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure

    Independent Core Rotation in Massive Filaments in Orion

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    We present high-angular-resolution ALMA (Atacama Large Millimeter Array) images of N2_{2}H+^{+} (1--0) that has been combined with those from the Nobeyama telescope toward OMC-2 and OMC-3 filamentary regions. The filaments (with typical widths of \sim 0.1 pc) and dense cores are resolved. The measured 2D velocity gradients of cores are between 1.3 and 16.7 km\,s1^{-1}\,pc1^{-1}, corresponding to a specific angular momentum (J/MJ/M) between 0.0012 and 0.016 pc\,km\,s1^{-1}. With respect to the core size RR, the specific angular momentum follows a power law J/MR1.52 ± 0.14J/M \propto R^{1.52~\pm~0.14}. The ratio (β\beta) between the rotational energy and gravitational energy ranges from 0.00041 to 0.094, indicating insignificant support from rotation against gravitational collapse. We further focus on the alignment between the cores' rotational axes, which is defined to be perpendicular to the direction of the velocity gradient (θG\theta_{G}), and the direction of elongation of filaments (θf\theta_{f}) in this massive star-forming region. The distribution of the angle between θf\theta_{f} and θG\theta_{G} was f ound to be random, i.e. the cores' rotational axes have no discernible correlation with the elongation of their hosting filament. This implies that, in terms of angular momentum, the cores have evolved to be dynamically independent from their natal filaments
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