Observation of Termination-Dependent Topological Connectivity in a Magnetic Weyl Kagome Lattice.
Federico MazzolaStefan EnznerPhilipp EckChiara BigiMatteo JugovacIulia CojocariuVitaliy FeyerZhixue ShuGian Marco PierantozziAlessandro De VitaPietro CarraraJun FujiiPhil D C KingGiovanni VinaiPasquale OrgianiCephise CachoMatthew D WatsonGiorgio RossiIvana VobornikTai KongDomenico Di SanteGiorgio SangiovanniGiancarlo PanaccionePublished in: Nano letters (2023)
Engineering surfaces and interfaces of materials promises great potential in the field of heterostructures and quantum matter designers, with the opportunity to drive new many-body phases that are absent in the bulk compounds. Here, we focus on the magnetic Weyl kagome system Co 3 Sn 2 S 2 and show how for the terminations of different samples the Weyl points connect differently, still preserving the bulk-boundary correspondence. Scanning tunneling microscopy has suggested such a scenario indirectly, and here, we probe the Fermiology of Co 3 Sn 2 S 2 directly, by linking it to its real space surface distribution. By combining micro-ARPES and first-principles calculations, we measure the energy-momentum spectra and the Fermi surfaces of Co 3 Sn 2 S 2 for different surface terminations and show the existence of topological features depending on the top-layer electronic environment. Our work helps to define a route for controlling bulk-derived topological properties by means of surface electrostatic potentials, offering a methodology for using Weyl kagome metals in responsive magnetic spintronics.
Keyphrases
- molecularly imprinted
- high resolution
- molecular dynamics
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics simulations
- biofilm formation
- single molecule
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- high throughput
- escherichia coli
- quantum dots
- staphylococcus aureus
- drug delivery
- monte carlo
- room temperature
- electron microscopy