Giant anomalous Hall effect in epitaxial Mn<sub>3.2</sub>Ge films with a cubic kagome structure

ORAL

Abstract

We report on the first example of epitaxial Mn3+δGe thin films with a cubic L12 structure [1]. The films are found to exhibit frustrated ferromagnetism with an average magnetization corresponding to 0.98 ± 0.06 μB /Mn, far larger than the parasitic ferromagnetism in hexagonal Mn3Ge and the partially compensated ferrimagnetism in tetragonal Mn3Ge. The Hall conductivity is the largest reported for the kagome magnets with a low-temperature value of σxy = 1587 S/cm. Density functional calculations predict that a chiral antiferromagnetic structure is lower in energy than a ferromagnetic configuration in an ordered stoichiometric crystal. However, chemical disorder driven by the excess Mn in our films explains in part why a frustrated 120 spin structure is not observed. Comparisons between the magnetization and the Hall resistivity indicate that a noncoplanar spin structure contributes the Hall signal. Anisotropic magnetoresistance and planar Hall effect with hysteresis up to 14 T provides further insights into this material. A combination of Monte Carlo simulations and DFT calculations are used to explain the anomalous behavior in this material

[1] J. S. R. McCoombs, et al. Phys. Rev. B 110, 064401 (2024).

*We acknowledge financial support from the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (Canada). Computational resources were provided by the Digital Research Alliance of Canada.

Publication: J. S. R. McCoombs, B. D. MacNeil, V. Askarpour, J. Myra, H. Herdin, M. Pula, M. D. Robertson, G. M. Luke, K. L. Kavanagh, J. Maassen, and T. L. Monchesky. Phys. Rev. B110, 064401 (2024).

A follow-up paper with Monte Carlo and further DFT expected to be submitted early in 2025

Presenters

  • Ted Monchesky

    • Dalhousie University

Authors

  • Ted Monchesky

    • Dalhousie University
  • Jason McCoombs

    • Dalhousie University
  • Brett MacNeil

    • Dalhousie University
    • Canadian Association of Physicists
  • Vahid Askarpour

    • Dalhousie University
  • Jack Myra

    • Dalhousie University
  • Hannah Herdin

    • Simon Fraser University
  • Mathew Pula

    • McMaster University
  • Michael Robertson

    • Acadia University
  • Graeme Luke

    • McMaster University
  • Karen L Kavanagh

    • Simon Fraser University
  • Jesse Maassen

    • Dalhousie University