Altermagnets have recently emerged as a new class of magnetic materials that combine compensated magnetic order with spin-split electronic band structures. In this work, we employ molecular beam epitaxy to grow MnTe thin films with controlled thickness on InP(111)A substrates. By performing angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements, we observe a large spin splitting of ~230 meV for bulk bands well below the Fermi level and identify surface states that cross the Fermi level. Electrical transport measurements reveal that a robust anomalous Hall (AH) effect persists down to 2 K and an AH sign reversal occurs near 175 K. By systematically tuning film thickness, growth conditions, and interfacial structure, we demonstrate that the AH response in MnTe films originates from the Berry curvature of surface states rather than from bulk bands. Our first-principles calculations reveal that this surface-state-driven AH effect is imprinted by the bulk altermagnetic order and remains unchanged for terminations with opposite Mn magnetic orientations. Our results establish a unique surface transport probe of bulk altermagnetism, demonstrate interface engineering as an effective route to generate and control the AH effect in altermagnets, and provide a unified understanding of the AH response in altermagentic MnTe films.
@article{arxiv.2602.09363,
title = {Surface-State-Driven Anomalous Hall Effect in Altermagnetic MnTe Films},
author = {Ling-Jie Zhou and Zi-Jie Yan and Hongtao Rong and Yufei Zhao and Pu Xiao and Lok-Kan Lai and Zhiyuan Xi and Ke Wang and Tibendra Adhikari and Ganesh P. Tiwari and Zhong Lin and Pascal Manue and Fabio Orlandi and Dmitry Khalyavin and Alexander J. Grutter and Chao-Xing Liu and Binghai Yan and Cui-Zu Chang},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.09363},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
28 pages, 5 figures, comments are very much welcome