Colossal magnetoresistance from spin-polarized polarons in an Ising system
Recent experiments suggest a new paradigm towards novel colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) in a family of materials EuM$_2$X$_2$(M=Cd, In, Zn; X=P, As), distinct from the traditional avenues involving Kondo-RKKY crossovers, magnetic phase transitions with structural distortions, or topological phase t...
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent experiments suggest a new paradigm towards novel colossal
magnetoresistance (CMR) in a family of materials EuM$_2$X$_2$(M=Cd, In, Zn;
X=P, As), distinct from the traditional avenues involving Kondo-RKKY
crossovers, magnetic phase transitions with structural distortions, or
topological phase transitions. Here, we use angle-resolved photoemission
spectroscopy (ARPES) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations to
explore their origin, particularly focusing on EuCd$_2$P$_2$. While the
low-energy spectral weight royally tracks that of the resistivity anomaly near
the temperature with maximum magnetoresistance (T$_{MR}$) as expected from
transport-spectroscopy correspondence, the spectra are completely incoherent
and strongly suppressed with no hint of a Landau quasiparticle. Using
systematic material and temperature dependence investigation complemented by
theory, we attribute this non-quasiparticle caricature to the strong presence
of entangled magnetic and lattice interactions, a characteristic enabled by the
$p$-$f$ mixing. Given the known presence of ferromagnetic clusters, this
naturally points to the origin of CMR being the scattering of spin-polarized
polarons at the boundaries of ferromagnetic clusters. These results are not
only illuminating to investigate the strong correlations and topology in
EuCd$_2$X$_2$ family, but, in a broader view, exemplify how multiple
cooperative interactions can give rise to extraordinary behaviors in condensed
matter systems. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.22727 |