Broken-symmetry phases of matter and their effects on electronic and magnetic properties

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2023

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Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science

Abstract

Physical symmetries inherent to a material are often reflected in its electronic and magnetic properties. The in-plane four-fold rotational symmetry of thin-film ferromagnets inherent to their tetragonal lattice is also exhibited by their cubic anisotropy. The magnetization as a function of applied magnetic field can be calculated via the Stoner- Wohlfarth model. These calculated hysteresis loops were fit to measured hysteresis loops to determine anisotropy constants consistent with known values. An electronic nematic state reduces the in-plane four-fold rotational symmetry of materials by inducing a structural transition from tetragonal to orthorhombic/monoclinic, with two-fold symmetry. This reduced symmetry persists in the electronic thermal transport. Nematicity enhances nearest-neighbor hopping along one axis and reduces it along the other. This results in a deformed Fermi surface compressed (elongated) along the axis of stronger (weaker) electron hopping. This drags van Hove singularities through the Fermi level, affecting quasiparticle lifetimes. Calculating conductivity from the Boltzmann kinetic equation, nematicity enhances thermal transport along one axis and diminishes it along the other. Additionally, s-wave superconductivity coexisting with nematicity creates a feedback on the superconducting gap with a d-wave instability, which can lead to gapless excitations. In the case of weak feedback, nematic superconductors behave like fully-gapped superconductors along both axes, where transport decreases exponentially with temperature. Once gapless excitations form, transport along both axes becomes T -linear at low-T . Similarly, striped antiferromagnetism (AFM2 and AFM3) reduces the rotational symmetry of a square unit cell to a larger two-fold symmetric magnetic cell. Modeling the band structure with a tight- binding model and considering a smaller periodicity in momentum-space, gaps the Fermi surface along one axis. Calculating conductivity reveals diminished transport along one axis and enhanced thermal transport along the other. Considering d-wave superconductivity in this model results in two cases. One has highly anisotropic transport with greatly enhanced T -linear transport along one axis and diminished transport decreasing exponentially with temperature along the other. The second has weakly anisotropic transport with diminished T -linear conductivity along both axes. The symmetry of a material's properties, such as magnetic anisotropy and thermal transport, are intrinsically linked to their crystalline, electronic, and magnetic symmetries.

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