Abstract
The kagome magnet is a new type of topological material that is known to support exotic quantum magnetic states. Experimental work has identified that hosts Dirac electronic states that could lead to topological and Chern quantum phases, but the optical response of the Dirac fermions of and its properties remain to be explored. Here, we perform an optical spectroscopy measurement combined with first-principles calculations on a single-crystal sample of to investigate the associated exotic phenomena. exhibits frequency-independent optical conductivity spectra in a broad range from 1800 to 3000 (220–370 meV) in experiments. The theoretical band structures and optical conductivity spectra are calculated with several shifted Fermi energies to compare with the experiment. The theoretical spectra with a 0.56 eV shift for Fermi energy are well consistent with our experimental results. In addition, massive quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) Dirac bands, which have a linear band dispersion in the plane and no band dispersion along the direction, exist close to the shifted Fermi energy. According to a tight-binding model analysis, the quasi-2D Dirac bands give rise to a flat optical conductivity, while its value is smaller than (about one tenth of) that from the calculations and experiments. It indicates that the other trivial bands also contribute to the flat optical conductivity.
- Received 20 July 2022
- Revised 16 November 2022
- Accepted 22 December 2022
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.107.045115
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