Intrinsic Berry Curvature Driven Anomalous Hall and Nernst Effect in Co$_2$MnSn
Abstract: Magnetic topological semimetals often exhibit unusual electronic and thermal transport due to nontrivial bulk band crossings, enabling simultaneous realization of large anomalous Hall and Nernst conductivities ($\sigma_{xy}$ and $\alpha_{xy}$). Here, a comprehensive experimental and theoretical study of the anomalous transport properties of ferromagnetic Co$2$MnSn is reported. First-principles calculations reveal topological Weyl points producing significant Berry curvature, driving dominant intrinsic anomalous Hall/Nernst effects. Electronic and thermal transport measurements demonstrate robust anomalous transport with substantial conductivity values that persist at room temperature ($\sigma{xy}\sim$ 500 S/cm, $\alpha_{xy}\sim$ 1.3 A/m/K). We also show how the chemical substitution (via tuning Fermi level) can boost these effects (up to $\sigma_{xy}\sim$ 1376 S/cm, $\alpha_{xy}\sim$ 1.49 A/m/K at 150 K). These findings position Co$_2$MnSn as a compelling platform for exploring topological transport phenomena and advancing next-generation thermoelectric and spintronic technologies.
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