Nature Communications (Feb 2025)

Three-dimensional mapping of the altermagnetic spin splitting in CrSb

  • Guowei Yang,
  • Zhanghuan Li,
  • Sai Yang,
  • Jiyuan Li,
  • Hao Zheng,
  • Weifan Zhu,
  • Ze Pan,
  • Yifu Xu,
  • Saizheng Cao,
  • Wenxuan Zhao,
  • Anupam Jana,
  • Jiawen Zhang,
  • Mao Ye,
  • Yu Song,
  • Lun-Hui Hu,
  • Lexian Yang,
  • Jun Fujii,
  • Ivana Vobornik,
  • Ming Shi,
  • Huiqiu Yuan,
  • Yongjun Zhang,
  • Yuanfeng Xu,
  • Yang Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56647-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Altermagnetism, a kind of collinear magnetism that is characterized by a momentum-dependent band and spin splitting without net magnetization, has recently attracted considerable interest. Finding altermagnetic materials with large splitting near the Fermi level necessarily requires three-dimensional k-space mapping. While this is crucial for spintronic applications and emergent phenomena, it remains challenging. Here, using synchrotron-based angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), spin-resolved ARPES and model calculations, we uncover a large altermagnetic splitting, up to ~1.0 eV, near the Fermi level in CrSb. We verify its bulk-type g-wave altermagnetism through systematic three-dimensional k-space mapping, which unambiguously reveals the altermagnetic symmetry and associated nodal planes. Spin-resolved ARPES measurements further verify the spin polarizations of the split bands near Fermi level. Tight-binding model analysis indicates that the large altermagnetic splitting arises from strong third-nearest-neighbor hopping mediated by Sb ions. The large band/spin splitting near Fermi level in metallic CrSb, together with its high T N (up to 705 K) and simple spin configuration, paves the way for exploring emergent phenomena and spintronic applications based on altermagnets.