No Arabic abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) compensated MnBi2Te4 is antiferromagnetic, but undergoes a spin-flop transition at intermediate fields, resulting in a canted phase before saturation. In this work, we experimentally show that the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in MnBi2Te4 originates from a topological response that is sensitive to the perpendicular magnetic moment and to its canting angle. Synthesis by molecular beam epitaxy allows us to obtain a large-area quasi-3D 24-layer MnBi2Te4 with near-perfect compensation that hosts the phase diagram observed in bulk which we utilize to probe the AHE. This AHE is seen to exhibit an antiferromagnetic response at low magnetic fields, and a clear evolution at intermediate fields through surface and bulk spin-flop transitions into saturation. Throughout this evolution, the AHE is super-linear versus magnetization rather than the expected linear relationship. We reveal that this discrepancy is related to the canting angle, consistent with the symmetry of the crystal. Our findings suggests that novel topological responses may be found in non-collinear ferromagnetic, and antiferromagnetic phases.
The Hall effect, the anomalous Hall effect and the spin Hall effect are fundamental transport processes in solids arising from the Lorentz force and the spin-orbit coupling respectively. The quant
The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state is a two-dimensional bulk insulator with a non-zero Chern number in absence of external magnetic fields. Protected gapless chiral edge states enable dissipationless current transport in electronic devices. Doping topological insulators with random magnetic impurities could realize the QAH state, but magnetic order is difficult to establish experimentally in the bulk insulating limit. Here we predict that the single quintuple layer of GdBiTe3 film could be a stoichiometric QAH insulator based on ab-initio calculations, which explicitly demonstrate ferromagnetic order and chiral edge states inside the bulk gap. We further investigate the topological quantum phase transition by tuning the lattice constant and interactions. A simple low-energy effective model is presented to capture the salient physical feature of this topological material.
Engineering the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in the emerging magnetic topological insulators (MTIs) has great potentials for quantum information processing and spintronics applications. In this letter, we synthesize the epitaxial Bi2Te3/MnTe magnetic heterostructures and observe pronounced AHE signals from both layers combined together. The evolution of the resulting hybrid AHE intensity with the top Bi2Te3 layer thickness manifests the presence of an intrinsic ferromagnetic phase induced by the topological surface states at the heterolayer-interface. More importantly, by doping the Bi2Te3 layer with Sb, we are able to manipulate the sign of the Berry phase-associated AHE component. Our results demonstrate the un-paralleled advantages of MTI heterostructures over magnetically doped TI counterparts, in which the tunability of the AHE response can be greatly enhanced. This in turn unveils a new avenue for MTI heterostructure-based multifunctional applications.
The polarity-tunable anomalous Hall effect (AHE) is useful for electronic device applications. Here in a magnetic topological insulator MnBi2Te4 grown by molecular beam epitaxy, we report the polarity change of the AHE by increasing the temperature or tuning the gate bias. This is possible because the anomalous Hall response is composed of two competing contributions with opposite polarities. The negative contribution is intrinsic to MnBi2Te4, follows an ambipolar gate response and has a larger coercivity with increasing thickness. Meanwhile, the positive one has a coercivity that is about one order of magnitude greater than the negative one, dominates the Hall response at higher temperatures, is more tunable by a gate bias and vanishes by increasing the thickness of the thin film. One possible explanation for the additional positive AHE is an extra surface ferromagnetism caused by the surface-state-mediated RKKY interaction among magnetic impurities on the surface. Our work provides the understanding of the AHE of MnBi2Te4, and paves the way for many device applications, e.g. energy-efficient voltage-controlled memory.
The Berry phase picture provides important insights into the electronic properties of condensed matter systems. The intrinsic anomalous Hall (AH) effect can be understood as a consequence of non-zero Berry curvature in momentum space. The realization of the quantum anomalous Hall effect provided conclusive evidence for the intrinsic mechanism of the AH effect in magnetic topological insulators (TIs). Here we fabricated magnetic TI/TI heterostructures and found both the magnitude and sign of the AH effect in the magnetic TI layer can be altered by tuning the TI thickness and/or the electric gate voltage. The sign change of the AH effect with increasing TI thickness is attributed to the charge transfer across the TI and magnetic TI layers, consistent with first-principles calculations. By fabricating the magnetic TI/TI/magnetic TI sandwich heterostructures with different dopants, we created an artificial topological Hall (TH) effect-like feature in Hall traces. This artificial TH effect is induced by the superposition of two AH effects with opposite signs instead of the formation of chiral spin textures in the samples. Our study provides a new route to engineer the Berry curvature in magnetic topological materials that may lead to potential technological applications.