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Layer Hall effect in a 2D topological Axion antiferromagnet

Authors :
Bahadur Singh
Christian Tzschaschel
Austin J Akey
Xin-Yue Zhang
Hai-Zhou Lu
Ni Ni
Hung-Ju Tien
Brian B. Zhou
Damien Bérubé
Chaowei Hu
Zumeng Huang
Claudia Felser
Arun Bansil
Rui Chen
Tay-Rong Chang
Thomas Ding
Weibo Gao
Naizhou Wang
Zhaowei Zhang
Jules Gardener
Qiong Ma
Sheng-Chin Ho
David C. Bell
Su-Yang Xu
Anyuan Gao
Hai-Peng Sun
Amit Agarwal
Hsin Lin
Kenneth S. Burch
Yu-Fei Liu
Kenji Watanabe
Yu-Xuan Wang
Jian-Xiang Qiu
Takashi Taniguchi
Barun Ghosh
Liang Fu
School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

While ferromagnets have been known and exploited for millennia, antiferromagnets (AFMs) were only discovered in the 1930s. The elusive nature indicates AFMs' unique properties: At large scale, due to the absence of global magnetization, AFMs may appear to behave like any non-magnetic material; However, such a seemingly mundane macroscopic magnetic property is highly nontrivial at microscopic level, where opposite spin alignment within the AFM unit cell forms a rich internal structure. In topological AFMs, such an internal structure leads to a new possibility, where topology and Berry phase can acquire distinct spatial textures. Here, we study this exciting possibility in an AFM Axion insulator, even-layered MnBi$_2$Te$_4$ flakes, where spatial degrees of freedom correspond to different layers. Remarkably, we report the observation of a new type of Hall effect, the layer Hall effect, where electrons from the top and bottom layers spontaneously deflect in opposite directions. Specifically, under no net electric field, even-layered MnBi$_2$Te$_4$ shows no anomalous Hall effect (AHE); However, applying an electric field isolates the response from one layer and leads to the surprising emergence of a large layer-polarized AHE (~50%$\frac{e^2}{h}$). Such a layer Hall effect uncovers a highly rare layer-locked Berry curvature, which serves as a unique character of the space-time $\mathcal{PT}$-symmetric AFM topological insulator state. Moreover, we found that the layer-locked Berry curvature can be manipulated by the Axion field, E$\cdot$B, which drives the system between the opposite AFM states. Our results achieve previously unavailable pathways to detect and manipulate the rich internal spatial structure of fully-compensated topological AFMs. The layer-locked Berry curvature represents a first step towards spatial engineering of Berry phase, such as through layer-specific moir\'e potential.<br />Comment: A revised version of this article is published in Nature

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb210110e577492f06b6bf9cef931264