Kramers nodal lines and Weyl fermions in SmAlSi
/ Authors
Yichen Zhang, Yuxiang Gao, Xue-Jie Gao, Shiming Lei, Z. Ni, J. Oh, Jian-wei Huang, Ziqin Yue, M. Zonno, S. Gorovikov
and 9 more authors
M. Hashimoto, D. Lu, J. Denlinger, R. Birgeneau, J. Kono, Liang Wu, K. T. Law, E. Morosan, M. Yi
/ Abstract
Kramers Nodal Lines (KNLs) have been theoretically proposed as special Weyl line degeneracies connecting time-reversal invariant momenta, but their observation in quantum materials is not established. Combining ARPES experiments with DFT calculations, the authors identify SmAlSi and its isostructural family as viable materials to host KNLs. Kramers nodal lines (KNLs) have recently been proposed theoretically as a special type of Weyl line degeneracy connecting time-reversal invariant momenta. KNLs are robust to spin orbit coupling and are inherent to all non-centrosymmetric achiral crystal structures, leading to unusual spin, magneto-electric, and optical properties. However, their existence in in real quantum materials has not been experimentally established. Here we gather the experimental evidence pointing at the presence of KNLs in SmAlSi, a non-centrosymmetric metal that develops incommensurate spin density wave order at low temperature. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, density functional theory calculations, and magneto-transport methods, we provide evidence suggesting the presence of KNLs, together with observing Weyl fermions under the broken inversion symmetry in the paramagnetic phase of SmAlSi. We discuss the nesting possibilities regarding the emergent magnetic orders in SmAlSi. Our results provide a solid basis of experimental observations for exploring correlated topology in SmAlSi
Journal: Communications Physics