Intercorrelated anomalous Hall and spin Hall effect in kagome-lattice Co
Sn
S
-based shandite films
Lau, Y.-C.*; 池田 絢哉*; 藤原 宏平*; 小沢 耀弘*; Zheng, J.*; 関 剛斎*; 野村 健太郎*; Du, L.*; Wu, Q.*; 塚崎 敦*; 高梨 弘毅
Lau, Y.-C.*; Ikeda, Junya*; Fujiwara, Kohei*; Ozawa, Akihiro*; Zheng, J.*; Seki, Takeshi*; Nomura, Kentaro*; Du, L.*; Wu, Q.*; Tsukazaki, Atsushi*; Takanashi, Koki
Magnetic Weyl semimetals (mWSMs) are characterized by linearly dispersive bands with chiral Weyl node pairs associated with broken time-reversal symmetry. One of the hallmarks of mWSMs is the emergence of large intrinsic anomalous Hall effect. On heating the mWSM above its Curie temperature, the magnetism vanishes while exchange-split Weyl point pairs collapse into doubly degenerate gapped Dirac states. Here, we reveal the attractive potential of these Dirac nodes in paramagnetic state for efficient spin current generation at room temperature via the spin Hall effect. Ni and In are introduced to separately substitute Co and Sn in a prototypal mWSM Co
Sn
S
shandite film and tune the Fermi level. Composition dependence of spin Hall conductivity for paramagnetic shandite at room temperature resembles that of anomalous Hall conductivity for ferromagnetic shandite at low temperature; exhibiting peak-like dependence centering around the Ni-substituted Co
Ni
Sn
S
and undoped Co
Sn
S
compositions, respectively. The observed spin Hall and anomalous Hall conductivity maxima at different compositions reflect optimum Fermi-level positioning relative to the paramagnetic Dirac and magnetic Weyl states, suggesting the common origin and intercorrelation between the two Hall effects. Our findings highlight a strategy for the quest of spin Hall materials, guided by the abundant experimental anomalous Hall-effect data of ferromagnets in the literature.