| Literature DB >> 36104552 |
Xiaokun Teng1, Lebing Chen1, Feng Ye2, Elliott Rosenberg3, Zhaoyu Liu3, Jia-Xin Yin4, Yu-Xiao Jiang4, Ji Seop Oh1,5, M Zahid Hasan4, Kelly J Neubauer1, Bin Gao1, Yaofeng Xie1, Makoto Hashimoto6, Donghui Lu6, Chris Jozwiak7, Aaron Bostwick7, Eli Rotenberg7, Robert J Birgeneau5,8, Jiun-Haw Chu3, Ming Yi9, Pengcheng Dai10.
Abstract
A hallmark of strongly correlated quantum materials is the rich phase diagram resulting from competing and intertwined phases with nearly degenerate ground-state energies1,2. A well-known example is the copper oxides, in which a charge density wave (CDW) is ordered well above and strongly coupled to the magnetic order to form spin-charge-separated stripes that compete with superconductivity1,2. Recently, such rich phase diagrams have also been shown in correlated topological materials. In 2D kagome lattice metals consisting of corner-sharing triangles, the geometry of the lattice can produce flat bands with localized electrons3,4, non-trivial topology5-7, chiral magnetic order8,9, superconductivity and CDW order10-15. Although CDW has been found in weakly electron-correlated non-magnetic AV3Sb5 (A = K, Rb, Cs)10-15, it has not yet been observed in correlated magnetic-ordered kagome lattice metals4,16-21. Here we report the discovery of CDW in the antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordered phase of kagome lattice FeGe (refs. 16-19). The CDW in FeGe occurs at wavevectors identical to that of AV3Sb5 (refs. 10-15), enhances the AFM ordered moment and induces an emergent anomalous Hall effect22,23. Our findings suggest that CDW in FeGe arises from the combination of electron-correlations-driven AFM order and van Hove singularities (vHSs)-driven instability possibly associated with a chiral flux phase24-28, in stark contrast to strongly correlated copper oxides1,2 and nickelates29-31, in which the CDW precedes or accompanies the magnetic order.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36104552 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05034-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504