LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Electronic correlations in nodal-line semimetals

Photo by rgaleriacom from unsplash

Dirac fermions with highly dispersive linear bands 1 – 3 are usually considered weakly correlated due to the relatively large bandwidths ( W ) compared to Coulomb interactions ( U… Click to show full abstract

Dirac fermions with highly dispersive linear bands 1 – 3 are usually considered weakly correlated due to the relatively large bandwidths ( W ) compared to Coulomb interactions ( U ). With the discovery of nodal-line semimetals, the notion of the Dirac point has been extended to lines and loops in momentum space. The anisotropy associated with nodal-line structure gives rise to greatly reduced kinetic energy along the line. However, experimental evidence for the anticipated enhanced correlations in nodal-line semimetals is sparse. Here, we report on prominent correlation effects in a nodal-line semimetal compound, ZrSiSe, through a combination of optical spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. We observed two fundamental spectroscopic hallmarks of electronic correlations: strong reduction (1/3) of the free-carrier Drude weight and also the Fermi velocity compared to predictions of density functional band theory. The renormalization of Fermi velocity can be further controlled with an external magnetic field. ZrSiSe therefore offers the rare opportunity to investigate correlation-driven physics in a Dirac system. What happens to topological materials when their electrons are strongly interacting is an open question. Shao and others demonstrate that ZrSiSe is a material that can address this as it has a topological band structure and non-trivial correlations.

Keywords: line; correlations nodal; line semimetals; nodal line; electronic correlations; physics

Journal Title: Nature Physics
Year Published: 2020

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.