Effects of thermal spin disorder and excess Mn on the electronic spectrum of
half-metallic NiMnSb are studied using first-principles calculations.
Temperature-dependent spin disorder, introduced within the vector disordered
local moment model, causes the valence band at the Γ point to broaden
and shift upwards, crossing the Fermi level and thereby closing the
half-metallic gap above room temperature. The spectroscopic signatures of
excess Mn on the Ni, Sb, and empty sites (MnNi, MnSb,
and MnE) are analyzed. MnNi is spectroscopically
invisible. The relatively weak coupling of MnSb and MnE
spins to the host strongly deviates from the Heisenberg model, and the spin of
MnE is canted in the ground state. While the half-metallic gap is
preserved in the collinear ground state of MnSb, thermal spin
disorder of the weakly coupled MnSb spins destroys it at low
temperatures. This property of MnSb may be the source of the
observed low-temperature transport anomalies.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, updated version with minor revisions and an
additional figure, accepted in Phys. Rev. B (Rapid Communication