| Literature DB >> 34290425 |
Anyuan Gao1, Yu-Fei Liu1, Chaowei Hu2, Jian-Xiang Qiu1, Christian Tzschaschel1, Barun Ghosh3,4, Sheng-Chin Ho1, Damien Bérubé1, Rui Chen5, Haipeng Sun5, Zhaowei Zhang6, Xin-Yue Zhang7, Yu-Xuan Wang7, Naizhou Wang6, Zumeng Huang6, Claudia Felser8, Amit Agarwal3, Thomas Ding7, Hung-Ju Tien9, Austin Akey10, Jules Gardener10, Bahadur Singh11, Kenji Watanabe12, Takashi Taniguchi13, Kenneth S Burch7, David C Bell10,14, Brian B Zhou7, Weibo Gao6, Hai-Zhou Lu5, Arun Bansil4, Hsin Lin15, Tay-Rong Chang9,16,17, Liang Fu18, Qiong Ma7, Ni Ni19, Su-Yang Xu20.
Abstract
Whereas ferromagnets have been known and used for millennia, antiferromagnets were only discovered in the 1930s1. At large scale, because of the absence of global magnetization, antiferromagnets may seem to behave like any non-magnetic material. At the microscopic level, however, the opposite alignment of spins forms a rich internal structure. In topological antiferromagnets, this internal structure leads to the possibility that the property known as the Berry phase can acquire distinct spatial textures2,3. Here we study this possibility in an antiferromagnetic axion insulator-even-layered, two-dimensional MnBi2Te4-in which spatial degrees of freedom correspond to different layers. We observe a type of Hall effect-the layer Hall effect-in which electrons from the top and bottom layers spontaneously deflect in opposite directions. Specifically, under zero electric field, even-layered MnBi2Te4 shows no anomalous Hall effect. However, applying an electric field leads to the emergence of a large, layer-polarized anomalous Hall effect of about 0.5e2/h (where e is the electron charge and h is Planck's constant). This layer Hall effect uncovers an unusual layer-locked Berry curvature, which serves to characterize the axion insulator state. Moreover, we find that the layer-locked Berry curvature can be manipulated by the axion field formed from the dot product of the electric and magnetic field vectors. Our results offer new pathways to detect and manipulate the internal spatial structure of fully compensated topological antiferromagnets4-9. The layer-locked Berry curvature represents a first step towards spatial engineering of the Berry phase through effects such as layer-specific moiré potential.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34290425 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03679-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962