Direct evidence for charge stripes in a layered cobalt oxide

Nature Communications Nature Publishing Group 7 (2016) 11632

Authors:

Andrew Boothroyd, Peter Babkevich, PG Freeman, M Enderle, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran

Abstract:

Recent experiments indicate that static stripe-like charge order is generic to the hole-doped copper oxide superconductors and competes with superconductivity. Here we show that a similar type of charge order is present in La5/3Sr1/3CoO4, an insulating analogue of the copper oxide superconductors containing cobalt in place of copper. The stripe phase we have detected is accompanied by short-range, quasi-one-dimensional, antiferromagnetic order, and provides a natural explanation for the distinctive hourglass shape of the magnetic spectrum previously observed in neutron-scattering measurements of La2−xSrxCoO4 and many hole-doped copper oxide superconductors. The results establish a solid empirical basis for theories of the hourglass spectrum built on short-range, quasi-static, stripe correlations.

Evolution of the Fermi surface of Weyl semimetals in the transition metal pnictide family.

Nature materials Nature Publishing Groupt 15:1 (2016) 27-31

Authors:

ZK Liu, LX Yang, Y Sun, T Zhang, H Peng, HF Yang, C Chen, Y Zhang, YF Guo, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, M Schmidt, Z Hussain, SK Mo, C Felser, B Yan, Yulin Chen

Abstract:

Topological Weyl semimetals (TWSs) represent a novel state of topological quantum matter which not only possesses Weyl fermions (massless chiral particles that can be viewed as magnetic monopoles in momentum space) in the bulk and unique Fermi arcs generated by topological surface states, but also exhibits appealing physical properties such as extremely large magnetoresistance and ultra-high carrier mobility. Here, by performing angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) on NbP and TaP, we directly observed their band structures with characteristic Fermi arcs of TWSs. Furthermore, by systematically investigating NbP, TaP and TaAs from the same transition metal monopnictide family, we discovered their Fermiology evolution with spin-orbit coupling (SOC) strength. Our experimental findings not only reveal the mechanism to realize and fine-tune the electronic structures of TWSs, but also provide a rich material base for exploring many exotic physical phenomena (for example, chiral magnetic effects, negative magnetoresistance, and the quantum anomalous Hall effect) and novel future applications.

Inverse order-disorder transition of charge stripes

Physical Review B American Physical Society (APS) 92:20 (2015) 205114

Authors:

Shu-Han Lee, Yen-Chung Lai, Chao-Hung Du, Alexander F Siegenfeld, Ying-Jer Kao, Peter D Hatton, D Prabhakaran, Yixi Su, Di-Jing Huang

Weyl semimetal phase in the non-centrosymmetric compound TaAs

Nature Physics 11:9 (2015) 728-732

Authors:

LX Yang, ZK Liu, Y Sun, H Peng, HF Yang, T Zhang, B Zhou, Y Zhang, YF Guo, M Rahn, D Prabhakaran, Z Hussain, SK Mo, C Felser, B Yan, YL Chen

Abstract:

Three-dimensional (3D) topological Weyl semimetals (TWSs) represent a state of quantum matter with unusual electronic structures that resemble both a '3D graphene' and a topological insulator. Their electronic structure displays pairs of Weyl points (through which the electronic bands disperse linearly along all three momentum directions) connected by topological surface states, forming a unique ark-like Fermi surface (FS). Each Weyl point is chiral and contains half the degrees of freedom of a Dirac point, and can be viewed as a magnetic monopole in momentum space. By performing angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy on the non-centrosymmetric compound TaAs, here we report its complete band structure, including the unique Fermi-arc FS and linear bulk band dispersion across the Weyl points, in agreement with the theoretical calculations. This discovery not only confirms TaAs as a 3D TWS, but also provides an ideal platform for realizing exotic physical phenomena (for example, negative magnetoresistance, chiral magnetic effects and the quantum anomalous Hall effect) which may also lead to novel future applications.

Terahertz field control of in-plane orbital order in La(0.5)Sr(1.5)MnO4.

Nature communications 6 (2015) 8175

Authors:

Timothy A Miller, Ravindra W Chhajlany, Luca Tagliacozzo, Bertram Green, Sergey Kovalev, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, Maciej Lewenstein, Michael Gensch, Simon Wall

Abstract:

In-plane anisotropic ground states are ubiquitous in correlated solids such as pnictides, cuprates and manganites. They can arise from doping Mott insulators and compete with phases such as superconductivity; however, their origins are debated. Strong coupling between lattice, charge, orbital and spin degrees of freedom results in simultaneous ordering of multiple parameters, masking the mechanism that drives the transition. Here we demonstrate that the orbital domains in a manganite can be oriented by the polarization of a pulsed THz light field. Through the application of a Hubbard model, we show that domain control can be achieved by enhancing the local Coulomb interactions, which drive domain reorientation. Our results highlight the key role played by the Coulomb interaction in the control and manipulation of orbital order in the manganites and demonstrate a new way to use THz to understand and manipulate anisotropic phases in a potentially broad range of correlated materials.