Abstract
Weyl semimetals have a variety of intriguing physical properties, including topologically protected electronic states that coexist with conducting states. Possible exploitation of topologically protected states in a conducting material is promising for technological applications. Weyl semimetals that form in a noncentrosymmetric structure that also contain magnetic moments may host a variety of emergent phenomena that cannot be seen in magnetic, centrosymmetric Weyl materials. It can be difficult to distinguish definitively between a centrosymmetric structure and one of its noncentrosymmetric subgroups with standard powder x-ray diffractometers in cases where two atoms in the compound have nearly the same atomic number, as is the case for the candidate Weyl semimetal CeGaGe. In these cases, a careful single-crystal neutron diffraction experiment with high-angle reflections provides complimentary information to x-ray diffraction and definitively resolves any ambiguity between centrosymmetric and noncentrosymmetric crystal structures. Single-crystal neutron diffraction measurements on the candidate Weyl semimetal CeGaGe confirms that its structure is noncentrosymmetric, described by space group 109 (I41md) rather than the centrosymmetric space group 141 (I41/amd). There are many high-angle reflections in the dataset that give clear, physically intuitive evidence that CeGaGe forms with I41md symmetry since Bragg planes of these reflections can contain Ga with no Ge or vice versa, whereas the Bragg planes for a structure with I41/amd symmetry would have a mix of Ga and Ge. Further, in some crystals we have studied, there is clear evidence for a structural transition from body-centered I41md symmetry to primitive P43 and/or P41 symmetry.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 184102 |
| Journal | Physical Review B |
| Volume | 111 |
| Issue number | 18 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - May 1 2025 |
Funding
W.J.G. would like to acknowledge helpful conversations with C. Huang and J. Brill about these experiments. The D8 Venture diffractometer was funded by the National Science Foundation Major Research Instrumentation Award (NSF-CHE-1625732) and by the University of Kentucky.