Abstract
Symmetry protected Dirac semimetals can be transformed into Weyl semimetals by breaking the protecting symmetry, leading to many exotic quantum phenomena such as chiral anomaly and anomalous Hall effect. Here we show that, due to the large Zeeman factor and small bandwidth along the axis in Dirac semimetal , a magnetic field of about 8 T along the -axis direction may annihilate the Weyl points and open up a two-dimensional (2D) Dirac mass gap, when the Zeeman splitting exceeds the bandwidth along the axis. This is manifested by a sharp drop of magnetoresistance (MR) above 8 T, which is probably due to additional carriers induced by the orbital splitting of the zeroth Landau level associated with the 2D Dirac point, which is a descendant of the original Weyl points. Further evidence of the additional carriers is provided by the Hall effect and different anisotropic magnetoresistance in low and high field regions. Our experiment reveals a probable topological quantum phase transition of field-induced Weyl points annihilation in Dirac semimetal and gives an alternative explanation for the drop of MR at high field.
- Received 17 February 2017
- Revised 17 May 2017
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.96.121401
©2017 American Physical Society