The in-plane Hall coefficient RH(T) of CeRhIn5, CeIrIn5, and
CeCoIn5 and their respective non-magnetic lanthanum analogs are reported
in fields to 90 kOe and at temperatures from 2 K to 325 K. RH(T) is
negative, field-independent, and dominated by skew-scattering above ∼ 50 K
in the Ce compounds. RH(H→0) becomes increasingly negative below 50 K
and varies with temperature in a manner that is inconsistent with skew
scattering. Field-dependent measurements show that the low-T anomaly is
strongly suppressed when the applied field is increased to 90 kOe. Measurements
on LaRhIn5, LaIrIn5, and LaCoIn5 indicate that the same
anomalous temperature dependence is present in the Hall coefficient of these
non-magnetic analogs, albeit with a reduced amplitude and no field dependence.
Hall angle (θH) measurements find that the ratio
ρxx/ρxy=cot(θH) varies as T2 below 20 K for all
three Ce-115 compounds. The Hall angle of the La-115 compounds follow this
T-dependence as well. These data suggest that the electronic-structure
contribution dominates the Hall effect in the 115 compounds, with f-electron
and Kondo interactions acting to magnify the influence of the underlying
complex band structure. This is in stark contrast to the situation in most 4f
and 5f heavy-fermion compounds where the normal carrier contribution to the
Hall effect provides only a small, T-independent background to RH.Comment: 23 pages and 8 figure