English

Designing light-element materials with large effective spin-orbit coupling

Materials Science 2022-02-21 v2

Abstract

Spin-orbit coupling (SOC), the core of numerous condensed-matter phenomena such as nontrivial band gap, magnetocrystalline anisotropy, etc, is generally considered to be appreciable only in heavy elements, detrimental to the synthetization and application of functional materials. Therefore, amplifying the SOC effect in light elements is of great importance. Here, focusing on 3d and 4d systems, we demonstrate that the interplay between crystal symmetry and electron correlation can dramatically enhance the SOC effect in certain partially occupied orbital multiplets, through the self-consistently reinforced orbital polarization as a pivot. We then provide design principles and comprehensive databases, in which we list all the Wyckoff positions and site symmetries, in all two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional crystals that potentially have such enhanced SOC effect. As an important demonstration, we predict nine material candidates from our selected 2D material pool as high-temperature quantum anomalous Hall insulators with large nontrivial band gaps of hundreds of meV. Our work provides an efficient and straightforward way to predict promising SOC-active materials, releasing the burden of requiring heavy elements for next-generation spin-orbitronic materials and devices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2107.06691,
  title  = {Designing light-element materials with large effective spin-orbit coupling},
  author = {Jiayu Li and Qiushi Yao and Lin Wu and Zongxiang Hu and Boya Gao and Xiangang Wan and Qihang Liu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.06691},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

26 pages, 1 table, and 3 figures. Supplementary information can be found in the published version

R2 v1 2026-06-24T04:11:28.227Z