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Topological nodal lines and hybrid Weyl nodes in YCoC2

  • Yuanfeng Xu
  • , Yueqiang Gu
  • , Tiantian Zhang
  • , Chen Fang
  • , Zhong Fang
  • , Xian Lei Sheng
  • , Hongming Weng*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • CAS - Institute of Physics
  • University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Songshan Lake Materials Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Based on first-principles calculations and effective model analysis, we propose that the noncentrosymmetric superconductor YCoC2 in normal state is a topological semimetal. In the absence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC), it can host two intersecting nodal rings protected by two mirror planes, respectively. One ring is composed of type-I nodes, where the two crossing bands have opposite slope sign in their dispersions. The other ring consists of both type-I and type-II nodes (the slope signs of the two bands are the same in certain direction). In the presence of SOC, the former nodal ring is gapped totally while the latter one evolves into ten pairs of Weyl nodes, with two of them being type-I and eight being type-II. The type-II Weyl nodes are further classified into two kinds with different velocity matrices when described in Weyl equation near the nodes. Fermi arcs from topological surface states are observed in the surface projected energy dispersions. It is notable that YCoC2 has been reported as a superconductor with a critical temperature Tc of 4.2 K. This makes it very attractive since including superconducting into a topological semimetal state might result in topological superconductivity and be used to synthesize Majorana zero modes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101109
JournalAPL Materials
Volume7
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2019

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