Symmetry breaking and ascending in the magnetic kagome metal FeGe
Shangfei Wu, Mason Klemm, Jay Shah, Ethan T. Ritz, Chunruo Duan,, Xiaokun Teng, Bin Gao, Feng Ye, Masaaki Matsuda, Fankang Li, Xianghan Xu,, Ming Yi, Turan Birol, Pengcheng Dai, and Girsh Blumberg

TL;DR
This study reveals an unusual symmetry-ascending phase transition in the magnetic kagome metal FeGe, where the crystal structure becomes more symmetric upon cooling, challenging typical expectations and highlighting complex interactions among lattice, charge, and spin degrees of freedom.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental evidence of symmetry-ascending phenomena in a magnetic kagome metal, emphasizing the role of multiple degrees of freedom and weak structural instabilities.
Findings
Crystalline symmetry increases upon cooling in FeGe.
Structural distortions are on the order of 10^(-4).
Unusual spin-lattice coupling observed.
Abstract
Spontaneous symmetry breaking-the phenomenon where an infinitesimal perturbation can cause the system to break the underlying symmetry-is a cornerstone concept in the understanding of interacting solid-state systems. In a typical series of temperature-driven phase transitions, higher temperature phases are more symmetric due to the stabilizing effect of entropy that becomes dominant as the temperature is increased. However, the opposite is rare but possible when there are multiple degrees of freedom in the system. Here, we present such an example of a symmetry-ascending phenomenon in a magnetic kagome metal FeGe by utilizing neutron Larmor diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. In the paramagnetic state at 460K, we confirm that the crystal structure is indeed hexagonal kagome lattice. On cooling to TN, the crystal structure changes from hexagonal to monoclinic with in-plane lattice…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · High-pressure geophysics and materials
