The theoretically predicted Chern insulators have highlighted the potential of easy-axis kagome ferromagnets to host the quantum anomalous Hall effect. Similar topological phases may also arise from in-plane ferromagnetism through the breaking of certain mirror symmetries in kagome materials. In this work, we show that the interplay between magnetism and mirror symmetries makes ferromagnetic kagome systems a versatile platform for realizing nontrivial topological phases, with the orientation of magnetic moments m̂(θ, ϕ) at lattice sites serving as a key tuning parameter. We construct a symmetry-adapted minimal tight-binding model for kagome ferromagnets that includes intrinsic spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and the intrinsic Rashba SOC permitted by broken out-of-plane mirror symmetry between nearest-neighbor kagome sites, enabling us to capture the resulting topological phase diagram as a function of m̂(θ,ϕ). In particular, the restoration of in-plane mirror symmetry for specific values of ϕ drives a topological phase transition upon varying the in-plane orientation of the moments m̂(θ = 90◦ , ϕ). In contrast, for fixed ϕ, the transitions driven by varying θ originate from the competition between Rashba SOC and intrinsic SOC. Density functional theory calculations for the ferromagnetic kagome monolayer Co3Pb3S2, a representative compound belonging to the family Co3X3Y2(X = Sn, Pb; Y = S, Se), corroborate our predictions based on the proposed minimal tight-binding model.
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Ritwik Das
Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science
Arijit Sen
SRM Institute of Science and Technology
Indra Dasgupta
Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science
Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science
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Das et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893eb6c1944d70ce04f14 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-648x/ae5c4d
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