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Unusual interlayer quantum transport behavior caused by the zeroth Landau level in YbMnBi2

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arxiv 1608.05956 v1 pith:WAPDN3HZ submitted 2016-08-21 cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.mes-hall

Unusual interlayer quantum transport behavior caused by the zeroth Landau level in YbMnBi2

classification cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords zerothcrossingfermionspointsrelativistictransportbandlevel
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Relativistic fermions in topological quantum materials are characterized by linear energy-momentum dispersion near band crossing points. Under magnetic field, relativistic fermions acquire Berry phase of {\pi} in cyclotron motion, leading to a zeroth Landau level (LL) at the crossing point. Such field-independent zeroth LL, which distinguishes relativistic fermions from conventional electron systems, is hardly probed in transport measurements since the Fermi energy (EF) is usually not right at the band crossing points in most topological materials. Here we report the observation of exotic quantum transport behavior resulting from the zeroth LL in a multiband topological semimetal YbMnBi2 which possesses linear band crossings both at and away from the Fermi level (FL). We show that the Dirac bands with the crossing points being above or below the FL leads to Shubnikov de-Haas oscillations in the in-plane magnetoresistance, whereas the Dirac bands with the crossing points being at the FL results in unusual angular dependences of the out-of-plane magnetoresistance and in-plane Hall resistivity due to the dependence of the zeroth LL's degeneracy on field orientation. Our results shed light on the transport mechanism of the zeroth LL's relativistic fermions in layered materials.

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