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Observation of a spontaneous anomalous Hall response in the Mn 5 Si 3 d-wave altermagnet candidate.

Helena ReichlovaRafael Lopes SeegerRafael González-HernándezIsmaila KountaRichard SchlitzDominik KriegnerPhilipp RitzingerMichaela LammelMiina LeiviskäAnna Birk HellenesKamil OlejníkVaclav PetricekPetr DoležalLukáš HorákEva SchmoranzerovaAntonín BaduraSylvain BertainaAndy ThomasVincent BaltzLisa MichezJairo SinovaSebastian T B GoennenweinTomáš JungwirthLibor Šmejkal
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Phases with spontaneous time-reversal ( T ) symmetry breaking are sought after for their anomalous physical properties, low-dissipation electronic and spin responses, and information-technology applications. Recently predicted altermagnetic phase features an unconventional and attractive combination of a strong T -symmetry breaking in the electronic structure and a zero or only weak-relativistic magnetization. In this work, we experimentally observe the anomalous Hall effect, a prominent representative of the T -symmetry breaking responses, in the absence of an external magnetic field in epitaxial thin-film Mn 5 Si 3 with a vanishingly small net magnetic moment. By symmetry analysis and first-principles calculations we demonstrate that the unconventional d-wave altermagnetic phase is consistent with the experimental structural and magnetic characterization of the Mn 5 Si 3 epilayers, and that the theoretical anomalous Hall conductivity generated by the phase is sizable, in agreement with experiment. An analogy with unconventional d-wave superconductivity suggests that our identification of a candidate of unconventional d-wave altermagnetism points towards a new chapter of research and applications of magnetic phases.
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