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Due to the potential applications in the low-power-consumption spintronic devices, the quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) has attracted tremendous attention in past decades. However, up to now, QAHE was only observed experimentally in topological insulators with Chern numbers C= 1 and 2 at very low temperatures. Here, we propose three novel two-dimensional stable kagome ferromagnets Co3Pb3S2, Co3Pb3Se2and Co3Sn3Se2that can realize QAHE with high Chern number of |C|=3. Monolayers Co3Pb3S2, Co3Pb3Se2 and Co3Sn3Se2 possess the large band gap of 70, 77 and 63 meV with Curie temperature TC of 51, 42 and 46 K, respectively. By constructing a heterostructure Co3Sn3Se2/MoS2, its TC is enhanced to 60 K and the band gap keeps about 60 meV due to the tensile strain of 2% at the interface. For the bilayer compound Co6Sn5Se4, it becomes a half-metal, with a relatively flat plateau in its anomalous Hall conductivity corresponding to |C| = 3 near the Fermi level. Our results provide new topological nontrivial systems of kagome ferromagnetic monolayers and heterostructrues possessing QAHE with high Chern number |C| = 3 and large band gaps.
Magnetic Weyl semimetals attract considerable interest not only for their topological quantum phenomena but also as an emerging materials class for realizing quantum anomalous Hall effect in the two-dimensional limit. A shandite compound Co3Sn2S2 wit
We theoretically investigate the localization mechanism of quantum anomalous Hall Effect (QAHE) with large Chern numbers $mathcal{C}$ in bilayer graphene and magnetic topological insulator thin films, by applying either nonmagnetic or spin-flip (magn
Kagome magnets are believed to have numerous exotic physical properties due to the possible interplay between lattice geometry, electron correlation and band topology. Here, we report the large anomalous Hall effect in the kagome ferromagnet LiMn$_6$
The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state is a two-dimensional topological insulating state that has quantized Hall resistance of h/Ce2 and vanishing longitudinal resistance under zero magnetic field, where C is called the Chern number. The QAH effect h
A short review paper for the quantum anomalous Hall effect. A substantially extended one is published as Adv. Phys. 64, 227 (2015).