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Signatures of Sixfold Degenerate Exotic Fermions in a Superconducting Metal PdSb2

2020, Kumar, Nitesh, Yao, Mengyu, Nayak, Jayita, Vergniory, Maia G., Bannies, Jörn, Wang, Zhijun, Schröter, Niels B.M., Strocov, Vladimir N., Müchler, Lukas, Shi, Wujun, Rienks, Emile D.L., Mañes, J.L., Shekhar, Chandra, Parkin, Stuart S.P., Fink, Jörg, Fecher, Gerhard H., Sun, Yan, Bernevig, B. Andrei, Felser, Claudia

Multifold degenerate points in the electronic structure of metals lead to exotic behaviors. These range from twofold and fourfold degenerate Weyl and Dirac points, respectively, to sixfold and eightfold degenerate points that are predicted to give rise, under modest magnetic fields or strain, to topological semimetallic behaviors. The present study shows that the nonsymmorphic compound PdSb2 hosts six-component fermions or sextuplets. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, crossing points formed by three twofold degenerate parabolic bands are directly observed at the corner of the Brillouin zone. The group theory analysis proves that under weak spin–orbit interaction, a band inversion occurs. © 2020 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

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Contrast Reversal in Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Its Implications for the Topological Classification of SmB6

2020, Herrmann, Hannes, Hlawenka, Peter, Siemensmeyer, Konrad, Weschke, Eugen, Sánchez-Barriga, Jaime, Varykhalov, Andrei, Shitsevalova, Natalya Y., Dukhnenko, Anatoliy V., Filipov, Volodymyr B., Gabáni, Slavomir, Flachbart, Karol, Rader, Oliver, Sterrer, Martin, Rienks, Emile D.L.

SmB6 has recently attracted considerable interest as a candidate for the first strongly correlated topological insulator. Such materials promise entirely new properties such as correlation-enhanced bulk bandgaps or a Fermi surface from spin excitations. Whether SmB6 and its surface states are topological or trivial is still heavily disputed however, and a solution is hindered by major disagreement between angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) results. Here, a combined ARPES and STM experiment is conducted. It is discovered that the STM contrast strongly depends on the bias voltage and reverses its sign beyond 1 V. It is shown that the understanding of this contrast reversal is the clue to resolving the discrepancy between ARPES and STM results. In particular, the scanning tunneling spectra reflect a low-energy electronic structure at the surface, which supports a trivial origin of the surface states and the surface metallicity of SmB6. © 2020 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim