# Orbital-flop Induced Magnetoresistance Anisotropy in Rare Earth   Monopnictide CeSb

**Authors:** Jing Xu, Fengcheng Wu, Jin-Ke Bao, Fei Han, Zhi-Li Xiao, Ivar Martin,, Yang-Yang Lyu, Yong-Lei Wang, Duck Young Chung, Mingda Li, Wei Zhang, John E., Pearson, Jidong S. Jiang, Mercouri G. Kanatzidis, and Wai-Kwong Kwok

arXiv: 1905.08682 · 2019-07-01

## TL;DR

This study reveals how orbital-flop transitions in CeSb induce magnetoresistance anisotropy, highlighting the role of orbital behavior in magnetic phenomena and potential quantum device applications.

## Contribution

It demonstrates the orbital-flop induced magnetoresistance anisotropy in CeSb and models its effects, advancing understanding of orbital contributions in magnetic materials.

## Key findings

- Additional minima in magnetoresistance due to orbital-flops
- Magnetization anisotropy explained by a phenomenological model
- Orbital-flops can be utilized in spin-valve-like devices

## Abstract

The charge and spin of the electrons in solids have been extensively exploited in electronic devices and in the development of spintronics. Another attribute of electrons - their orbital nature - is attracting growing interest for understanding exotic phenomena and in creating the next-generation of quantum devices such as orbital qubits. Here, we report on orbital-flop induced magnetoresistance anisotropy in CeSb. In the low temperature high magnetic-field driven ferromagnetic state, a series of additional minima appear in the angle-dependent magnetoresistance. These minima arise from the anisotropic magnetization originating from orbital-flops and from the enhanced electron scattering from magnetic multidomains formed around the first-order orbital-flop transition. The measured magnetization anisotropy can be accounted for with a phenomenological model involving orbital-flops and a spin-valve-like structure is used to demonstrate the viable utilization of orbital-flop phenomenon. Our results showcase a contribution of orbital behavior in the emergence of intriguing phenomena.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.08682