Consequences of breaking time reversal symmetry in LaSb: a resistivity plateau and extreme magnetoresistance
F. F. Tafti, Q. D. Gibson, S. K. Kushwaha, N. Haldolaarachchige, and, R. J. Cava

TL;DR
LaSb exhibits extreme magnetoresistance, resistivity plateau, and quantum oscillations despite lacking typical topological features, making it an ideal model for understanding TRS breaking effects in topological semimetals.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates that LaSb, a simple rock-salt structured material, exhibits all exotic behaviors associated with topological semimetals without possessing typical topological characteristics.
Findings
Resistivity plateau at 15 K under magnetic field
Ultrahigh carrier mobility in the plateau region
Quantum oscillations with non-trivial Berry phase
Abstract
Time reversal symmetry (TRS) protects the metallic surface modes of topological insulators (TIs). The transport signature of robust metallic surface modes of TIs is a plateau that arrests the exponential divergence of the insulating bulk with decreasing temperature. This universal behavior is observed in all TI candidates ranging from Bi2Te2Se to SmB6. Recently, several topological semimetals (TSMs) have been found that exhibit extreme magnetoresistance (XMR) and TI universal resistivity behavior revealed only when breaking TRS, a regime where TIs theoretically cease to exist. Among these new materials, TaAs and NbP are nominated for Weyl semimetal due to their lack of inversion symmetry, Cd3As2 is nominated for Dirac semimetal due to its linear band crossing at the Fermi level, and WTe2 is nominated for resonant compensated semimetal due to its perfect electron-hole symmetry. Here we…
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