Titanic Magnetoresistance in WTe2
Mazhar N. Ali, Jun Xiong, Steven Flynn, Quinn Gibson, Leslie Schoop,, Neel Haldolaarachchige, N. P. Ong, Jing Tao, R. J. Cava

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of extremely large, non-saturating magnetoresistance in WTe2, a layered transition metal dichalcogenide, with potential implications for magnetic sensors and spintronics, and discusses its origin related to electron-hole resonance.
Contribution
The study provides the first observation of giant, anisotropic, non-saturating magnetoresistance in WTe2 and explores its origin as a possible electron-hole resonance in a perfectly balanced semimetal.
Findings
Magnetoresistance reaches 2.5 million percent at 0.4K in 45T
Magnetoresistance shows no saturation up to 60T
WTe2 may be the first perfectly balanced semimetal
Abstract
Magnetoresistance is the change of a material's electrical resistance in response to an applied magnetic field. In addition to its intrinsic scientific interest, it is a technologically important property, placing it in "Pasteur's quadrant" of research value: materials with large magnetorsistance have found use as magnetic sensors 1, in magnetic memory 2, hard drives 3, transistors 4, and are the subject of frequent study in the field of spintronics 5, 6. Here we report the observation of an extremely large one-dimensional positive magnetoresistance (XMR) in the layered transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) WTe2; 452,700 percent at 4.5 Kelvin in a magnetic field of 14.7 Tesla, and 2.5 million percent at 0.4 Kelvin in 45 Tesla, with no saturation. The XMR is highly anisotropic, maximized in the crystallographic direction where small pockets of holes and electrons are found in the…
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