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The temperature dependence of the optical properties of the delafossite PdCoO$_2$ has been measured in the a-b planes over a wide frequency range. The optical conductivity due to the free-carrier (intraband) response falls well below the interband transitions, allowing the plasma frequency to be determined from the $f$-sum rule. Drude-Lorentz fits to the complex optical conductivity yield estimates for the free-carrier plasma frequency and scattering rate. The in-plane plasma frequency has also been calculated using density functional theory. The experimentally-determined and calculated values for the plasma frequencies are all in good agreement; however, at low temperature the optically-determined scattering rate is much larger than the estimate for the transport scattering rate, indicating a strong frequency-dependent renormalization of the optical scattering rate. In addition to the expected in-plane infrared-active modes, two very strong features are observed that are attributed to the coupling of the in-plane carriers to the out-of-plane longitudinal optic modes.
A wide range of unconventional transport phenomena have recently been observed in single-crystal delafossite metals. Here, we present a theoretical framework to elucidate electron transport using a combination of first-principles calculations and num
Zirconium pentatetelluride, ZrTe5, shows remarkable sensitivity to hydrostatic pressure. In this work we address the high-pressure transport and optical properties of this compound, on samples grown by flux and charge vapor transport. The high-pressu
To account for the anomalous/spin Hall conductivities and spin-orbit torque in the zeroth order of electron scattering time in strongly spin-orbit coupled systems, the Boltzmann transport theory in the case of weak disorder-potentials has been augmen
Geometric electron optics may be implemented in solid state when transport is ballistic on the length scale of a device. Currently, this is realized mainly in 2D materials characterized by circular Fermi surfaces. Here we demonstrate that the nearly
In many realistic topological materials, more than one kind of fermions contribute to the electronic bands crossing the Fermi level, leading to various novel phenomena. Here, using momentum-resolved inelastic electron scattering, we investigate the p