Strain-tunability of the multipolar Berry curvature in altermagnet MnTe

ORAL

Abstract

The anomalous Hall effect describes the generation of a transverse voltage by a longitudinal current even in the absence of an external magnetic field. While typically observed in ferromagnets, it has also been predicted to arise in altermagnets, materials characterized by rotational symmetries that enable broken time reversal symmetry despite compensated collinear magnetic ordering. These symmetries enforce band (anti)crossings that can generate significant contributions to the Berry curvature that drives the anomalous Hall effect. This Berry curvature is predicted to exhibit a characteristic multipolar order, resulting in a symmetry-enforced distribution at or near net compensation which is highly sensitive to perturbations that distort this balance. However, exploring the predicted multipolar Berry curvature of altermagnets and its reversible manipulation remains challenging. Here, we demonstrate evidence for the multipolar nature of the altermagnetic Berry curvature in MnTe by tuning the anomalous Hall effect via uniaxial stress. Upon straining, the magnitude of the anomalous Hall conductivity changes and, at a critical strain of 0.14%, the sign is reversed. Symmetry analysis and density functional theory calculations reveal that this tunability is a direct consequence of the altermagnetic multipolar Berry curvature. Our results provide insight into the role of crystal and magnetic symmetries in the realization of higher-order Berry curvature distributions and their tunability.

Publication: Smolenski, S., et al. "Strain-tunability of the multipolar Berry curvature in altermagnet MnTe." arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.21481 (2025).

Presenters

  • Shane Smolenski

    • University of Michigan

Authors

  • Shane Smolenski

    • University of Michigan
  • Ning Mao

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • Dechen Zhang

    • University of Michigan
  • Yucheng Guo

    • Rice University
  • Ashiq Shawon

    • University of Michigan
    • Michigan State University
  • Mingyu Xu

    • Michigan State University
  • Eoghan Downey

    • University of Michigan
  • Trisha Musall

    • University of Michigan
  • Ming Yi

    • Rice University
  • Weiwei Xie

    • Michigan State University
  • Christopher Jozwiak

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Advanced Light Source
    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • LBNL
    • Advanced Light Source
    • Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
  • Aaron Bostwick

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Advanced Light Source
    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • LBNL
    • Advanced Light Source
    • Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
  • Nobumichi Tamura

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Eli Rotenberg

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Lu Li

    • University of Michigan
  • Kai Sun

    • University of Michigan
  • Yang Zhang

    • University of Tennessee
  • Na Hyun Jo

    • University of Michigan