ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We investigate interacting spin susceptibilities in lattice models for $mathcal{T}$-reversal symmetry-broken Weyl semimetals. We employ a random phase approximation (RPA) method for the spin-SU(2)-symmetry-broken case that includes mixtures of ladder and bubble diagrams, beyond a SU(2)-symmetric case. Within this approach, the relations between the tendency towards magnetic order and the band structure tilt parameter $gamma$ under different temperatures are explored. The critical interaction strength $U_c$ for magnetic ordering decreases as the tilt term changes from type-I Weyl semimetals to type-II. The lower temperature, the sharper is the drop in $U_c$ at the critical point between them. The variation of $U_c$ with a slight doping near half-filling is also studied. It is generally found that these Weyl systems show a strongly anisotropic spin response with an enhanced doubly degenerate transverse susceptibility perpendicular to tilt direction, inherited from $mathcal{C}_{4z}$ rational symmetry of bare Hamiltonian, but with the longitudinal response suppressed with respect to that. For small tilts $gamma$ and strong enough interaction, we find two degenerate ordering patterns with spin order orthogonal to the tilt direction but much shorter spin correlation length parallel to the spin direction. With increasing the tilt, the system develops instabilities with respect to in-plane magnetic orders with wavevector $(0,pi, q_z)$ and $(pi,0, q_z)$, with $q_z$ increasing from 0 to $pi$ before the transition to a type-II Weyl semimetal is reached. These results indicate a greater richness of magnetic phases in correlated Weyl semimetals that also pose challenges for precise theoretical descriptions.
Weyl semimetals, featuring massless linearly dispersing chiral fermions in three dimensions, provide an excellent platform for studying the interplay of electronic interactions and topology, and exploring new correlated states of matter. Here, we exa
Weyl fermions play a major role in quantum field theory but have been quite elusive as fundamental particles. Materials based on quasi two-dimensional bismuth layers were recently designed and provide an arena for the study of the interplay between a
Fermions in nature come in several types: Dirac, Majorana and Weyl are theoretically thought to form a complete list. Even though Majorana and Weyl fermions have for decades remained experimentally elusive, condensed matter has recently emerged as fe
Type II Weyl semimetal, a three dimensional gapless topological phase, has drawn enormous interest recently. These topological semimetals enjoy overtilted dispersion and Weyl nodes that separate the particle and hole pocket. Using perturbation renorm
Type-II Weyl semimetals are characterized by the tilted linear dispersion in the low-energy excitations, mimicking Weyl fermions but with manifest violation of the Lorentz invariance, which has intriguing quantum transport properties. The magnetocond