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      Orbital effect and weak localization physics in the longitudinal magnetoresistance of the Weyl semimetals NbP, NbAs, TaP and TaAs

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          Abstract

          Weyl semimetals such as the TaAs family (TaAs, TaP, NbAs, NbP) host quasiparticle excitations resembling the long sought after Weyl fermions at special band-crossing points in the band structure denoted as Weyl nodes. They are predicted to exhibit a negative longitudinal magnetoresistance (LMR) due to the chiral anomaly if the Fermi energy is sufficiently close to the Weyl points. However, current jetting effects, i.e. current inhomogeneities caused by a strong, field-induced conductivity anisotropy in semimetals, have a similar experimental signature and therefore have hindered a determination of the intrinsic LMR in the TaAs family so far. This work investigates the longitudinal magnetoresistance of all four members of this family along the crystallographic \(a\) and \(c\) direction. Our samples are of similar quality as those previously studied in the literature and have a similar chemical potential as indicated by matching quantum oscillation (QO) frequencies. Care was taken to ensure homogeneous currents in all measurements. As opposed to previous studies where this was not done, we find a positive LMR that saturates in fields above 4 T in TaP, NbP and NbAs for \(B||c\). Using Fermi-surface geometries from band structure calculations that had been confirmed by experiment, we show that this is the behaviour expected from a classical purely orbital effect, independent on the distance of the Weyl node to the Fermi energy. The TaAs family of compounds is the first to show such a simple LMR without apparent influences of scattering anisotropy. In configurations where the orbital effect is small, i.e. for \(B||a\) in NbAs and NbP, we find a non-monotonous LMR including regions of negative LMR. We discuss a weak antilocalisation scenario as an alternative interpretation than the chiral anomaly for these results, since it can fully account for the overall field dependence.

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          Focused Ion Beam Microstructuring of Quantum Matter

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            Chiral magnetoresistance in the Weyl semimetal NbP

            NbP is a recently realized Weyl semimetal (WSM), hosting Weyl points through which conduction and valence bands cross linearly in the bulk and exotic Fermi arcs appear. The most intriguing transport phenomenon of a WSM is the chiral anomaly-induced negative magnetoresistance (NMR) in parallel electric and magnetic fields. In intrinsic NbP the Weyl points lie far from the Fermi energy, making chiral magneto-transport elusive. Here, we use Ga-doping to relocate the Fermi energy in NbP sufficiently close to the W2 Weyl points, for which the different Fermi surfaces are verified by resultant quantum oscillations. Consequently, we observe a NMR for parallel electric and magnetic fields, which is considered as a signature of the chiral anomaly in condensed-matter physics. The NMR survives up to room temperature, making NbP a versatile material platform for the development of Weyltronic applications.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              12 November 2019
              Article
              1911.04775
              34756c07-713b-44dd-9a8b-4e4f0bc096ca

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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              cond-mat.str-el

              Condensed matter
              Condensed matter

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