Absence of topological Hall effect in Fe$_x$Rh$_{100-x}$ epitaxial films: revisiting their phase diagram
Xiaoyan Zhu, Hui Li, Jing Meng, Xinwei Feng, Zhixuan Zhen, Haoyu Lin,, Bocheng Yu, Wenjuan Cheng, Dongmei Jiang, Yang Xu, Tian Shang, and Qingfeng, Zhan

TL;DR
This study systematically investigates Fe$_x$Rh$_{100-x}$ epitaxial films, revisiting their magnetic phase diagram and Hall effects, and finds no evidence of topological Hall effect, suggesting previous observations were likely extrinsic.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive analysis of Fe$_x$Rh$_{100-x}$ films, clarifying their phase transitions and Hall effects, and challenges previous claims of topological Hall effect in these materials.
Findings
FM-AFM transition extends over a wider Fe-content range in films.
Absence of topological Hall effect in all studied compositions.
Anomalous Hall effect explained by interface iron moments.
Abstract
A series of FeRh () films were epitaxially grown using magnetron sputtering, and were systematically studied by magnetization-, electrical resistivity-, and Hall resistivity measurements. After optimizing the growth conditions, phase-pure FeRh films were obtained, and their magnetic phase diagram was revisited. The ferromagnetic (FM) to antiferromagnetic (AFM) transition is limited at narrow Fe-contents with in the bulk FeRh alloys. By contrast, the FM-AFM transition in the FeRh films is extended to cover a much wider range between 33 % and 53 %, whose critical temperature slightly decreases as increasing the Fe-content. The resistivity jump and magnetization drop at the FM-AFM transition are much more significant in the FeRh films with 50 % Fe-content than in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
