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Probing FeSi, a d-electron topological Kondo insulator candidate, with magnetic field, pressure, and microwaves

Recently, evidence for a conducting surface state (CSS) below 19 K was reported for the correlated d-electron small gap semiconductor FeSi. In the work reported herein, the CSS and the bulk phase of FeSi were probed via electrical resistivity ρ measurements as a function of temperature T, magnetic f...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Breindel, Alexander J., Deng, Yuhang, Moir, Camilla M., Fang, Yuankan, Ran, Sheng, Lou, Hongbo, Li, Shubin, Zeng, Qiaoshi, Shu, Lei, Wolowiec, Christian T., Schuller, Ivan K., Rosa, Priscila F. S., Fisk, Zachary, Singleton, John, Maple, M. Brian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9974408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36791111
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2216367120
Descripción
Sumario:Recently, evidence for a conducting surface state (CSS) below 19 K was reported for the correlated d-electron small gap semiconductor FeSi. In the work reported herein, the CSS and the bulk phase of FeSi were probed via electrical resistivity ρ measurements as a function of temperature T, magnetic field B to 60 T, and pressure P to 7.6 GPa, and by means of a magnetic field-modulated microwave spectroscopy (MFMMS) technique. The properties of FeSi were also compared with those of the Kondo insulator SmB(6) to address the question of whether FeSi is a d-electron analogue of an f-electron Kondo insulator and, in addition, a “topological Kondo insulator” (TKI). The overall behavior of the magnetoresistance of FeSi at temperatures above and below the onset temperature T(S) = 19 K of the CSS is similar to that of SmB(6). The two energy gaps, inferred from the ρ(T) data in the semiconducting regime, increase with pressure up to about 7 GPa, followed by a drop which coincides with a sharp suppression of T(S). Several studies of ρ(T) under pressure on SmB(6) reveal behavior similar to that of FeSi in which the two energy gaps vanish at a critical pressure near the pressure at which T(S) vanishes, although the energy gaps in SmB(6) initially decrease with pressure, whereas in FeSi they increase with pressure. The MFMMS measurements showed a sharp feature at T(S) ≈ 19 K for FeSi, which could be due to ferromagnetic ordering of the CSS. However, no such feature was observed at T(S) ≈ 4.5 K for SmB(6).