ArXiv TLDR

Giant Room-Temperature Third-Order Electrical Transport in a Thin-Film Altermagnet Candidate

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2604.13893

Hongyu Chen, Peixin Qin, Ziang Meng, Guojian Zhao, Kai Chen + 12 more

cond-mat.mes-hallcond-mat.mtrl-scicond-mat.str-elcond-mat.supr-conphysics.app-ph

TLDR

This paper demonstrates giant room-temperature third-order electrical transport in RuO2 thin films, an altermagnet candidate, driven by quantum geometry.

Key contributions

  • Altermagnets host both T-odd and T-even quantum geometric quantities despite vanishing net magnetization.
  • Observed giant room-temperature third-order electrical transport responses in (101)-oriented RuO2 thin films.
  • The third-order Hall effect correlates with altermagnetic order and can detect the Neel vector.
  • Supports the existence of altermagnetism in 8-nm-thick RuO2 films, highlighting device potential.

Why it matters

This work confirms altermagnetism in RuO2 thin films and reveals their unique quantum geometric properties. It opens new avenues for exploring quantum geometry and developing advanced quantum electronic and spintronic devices operating at room temperature.

Original Abstract

Quantum geometry, a quantum mechanical quantity comprised of Berry curvature and quantum metric, describes the geometric structure of the electronic bands in solids. The correlation between nontrivial quantum geometry and quantum materials leads to new findings in condensed matter systems. Here we demonstrate that altermagnets, with spontaneously broken time-reversal (T)- half-lattice-translation and parity-time symmetry, host both T-odd and T-even quantum geometric quantities that simultaneously manifest themselves despite the vanishing net magnetization. Consequently, giant room-temperature third-order electrical transport responses with sizable quantum geometric contributions are observed in (101)-oriented RuO2 thin films, an altermagnetic candidate; in particular, the third-order Hall effect is intimately correlated with altermagnetic order and can serve as a promising tool for detecting the Neel vector. Our work not only supports the existence of altermagnetism in 8-nm-thick RuO2 thin films, but also shows altermagnets as a versatile platform for exploring quantum geometry and constructing quantum electronic and spintronic devices.

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