Publication | Open Access
Raman Signatures of Broken Inversion Symmetry and In‐Plane Anisotropy in Type‐II Weyl Semimetal Candidate TaIrTe<sub>4</sub>
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Citations
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References
2018
Year
The layered ternary compound TaIrTe<sub>4</sub> is an important candidate to host the recently predicted type-II Weyl fermions. However, a direct and definitive proof of the absence of inversion symmetry in this material, a prerequisite for the existence of Weyl Fermions, has so far remained evasive. Herein, an unambiguous identification of the broken inversion symmetry in TaIrTe<sub>4</sub> is established using angle-resolved polarized Raman spectroscopy. Combining with high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, an efficient and nondestructive recipe to determine the exact crystallographic orientation of TaIrTe<sub>4</sub> crystals is demonstrated. Such technique could be extended to the fast identification and characterization of other type-II Weyl fermions candidates. A surprisingly strong in-plane electrical anisotropy in TaIrTe<sub>4</sub> thin flakes is also revealed, up to 200% at 10 K, which is the strongest known electrical anisotropy for materials with comparable carrier density, notably in such good metals as copper and silver.
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