In the search for new spintronic materials with high spin-polarization at room-temperature, we have synthesized an osmium based double perovskite with a Curie-temperature of 725 K. Our combined experimental results confirm the existence of a sizable induced magnetic moment at the Os site, supported by band-structure calculations in agreement with a proposed kinetic energy driven mechanism of ferrimagnetism in these compounds. The intriguing property of Sr2CrOsO6 is that it is at the endpoint of a metal-insulator transition due to 5d band filling, and at the same time ferrimagnetism and high-spin polarization is preserved. PACS numbers: 61.12.Ld 75.50.Gg 75.50.Pp 75.50.Vv 81.05.ZxA so-called half-metal is a highly desired material for spintronics, as only charge carriers having one of the two possible polarization states contribute to conduction. In the class of the ferrimagnetic double perovskites such half-metals are well known, e. g. Sr 2 FeMoO 6 [1]. The here described compound Sr 2 CrOsO 6 is special, as it has a completely filled 5d t 2g minority spin orbital, while the majority spin channel is still gapped. It is thus at the endpoint of an ideally fully spin-polarized metal-insulator transition. At the metallic side of this transition we have the half-metallic materials Sr 2 CrWO 6 [2] and Sr 2 CrReO 6 [3,4]. Within the unique materials class of double perovskites, therefore, one can find high Curie-temperature ferrimagnets with spin-polarized conductivity ranging over several orders of magnitude from ferrimagnetic metallic to ferrimagnetic insulating tunable by electron doping. Note that Sr 2 CrOsO 6 , where a regular spin polarized 5d band is shifted below the Fermi level, is fundamentally different from a diluted magnetic semiconductor, where spin-polarized charge carriers derive from impurity states.While for simple perovskites as the half-metallic ferromagnetic manganites the Curie-temperature, T C , is in the highest case still close to room-temperature, halfmetallic ferrimagnetic double perovskites can have a considerably higher T C [5]. It has been suggested that ferrimagnetism in the double perovskites is kinetic energy driven [6,7,8]. In short, due to the hybridization of the exchange split 3d-orbitals of Fe 3+ (3d 5 , spin majority orbitals fully occupied) or Cr 3+ (3d 3 , only t 2g are fully occupied), and the non-magnetic 4d/5d-orbitals of * Electronic address: alff@oxide.tu-darmstadt.de Mo, W, Re or Os (N -sites), a kinetic energy gain is only possible for the minority spin carriers. This will lead to a corresponding shift of the bare energy levels at the non-magnetic site, and a strong tendency to half-metallic behavior. This mechanism is operative for the Fe 3+ and Cr 3+ (M sites) compounds [2], where all 3d majority spin states resp. all t 2g majority spin sates are fully occupied and represent localized spins. In agreement with band-structure calculations [1, 2,6,9,10,11] this mechanism is naturally associated with half-metallic behavior, as the spin-polarized conduction electrons mediate ...
Magnetic Weyl semimetals have novel transport phenomena related to pairs of Weyl nodes in the band structure. Although the existence of Weyl fermions is expected in various oxides, the evidence of Weyl fermions in oxide materials remains elusive. Here we show direct quantum transport evidence of Weyl fermions in an epitaxial 4d ferromagnetic oxide SrRuO3. We employ machine-learning-assisted molecular beam epitaxy to synthesize SrRuO3 films whose quality is sufficiently high to probe their intrinsic transport properties. Experimental observation of the five transport signatures of Weyl fermions—the linear positive magnetoresistance, chiral-anomaly-induced negative magnetoresistance, π phase shift in a quantum oscillation, light cyclotron mass, and high quantum mobility of about 10,000 cm2V−1s−1—combined with first-principles electronic structure calculations establishes SrRuO3 as a magnetic Weyl semimetal. We also clarify the disorder dependence of the transport of the Weyl fermions, which gives a clear guideline for accessing the topologically nontrivial transport phenomena.
The ground state of superconductors is characterized by the long-range order of condensed Cooper pairs: this is the only order present in conventional superconductors. The high-transition-temperature (high-T(c)) superconductors, in contrast, exhibit more complex phase behaviour, which might indicate the presence of other competing ground states. For example, the pseudogap--a suppression of the accessible electronic states at the Fermi level in the normal state of high-T(c) superconductors-has been interpreted as either a precursor to superconductivity or as tracer of a nearby ground state that can be separated from the superconducting state by a quantum critical point. Here we report the existence of a second order parameter hidden within the superconducting phase of the underdoped (electron-doped) high-T(c) superconductor Pr2-xCe(x)CuO4-y and the newly synthesized electron-doped material La2-xCe(x)CuO4-y (ref. 8). The existence of a pseudogap when superconductivity is suppressed excludes precursor superconductivity as its origin. Our observation is consistent with the presence of a (quantum) phase transition at T = 0, which may be a key to understanding high-T(c) superconductivity. This supports the picture that the physics of high-T(c) superconductors is determined by the interplay between competing and coexisting ground states.
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