Abstract
The Coulomb interaction in systems of quasi-relativistic massless electrons has an unscreened long-range component at variance with conventional correlated metals.We used nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements to reveal unusual spin correlations of two-dimensional Weyl fermions in an organic material, causing a divergent increase of the Korringa ratio by a factor of 1000 upon cooling, in marked contrast to conventional metallic behavior. Combined with model calculations, we show that this divergence stems from an interaction-driven velocity renormalization that almost exclusively suppresses zero-momentum spin fluctuations. At low temperatures, the NMR relaxation rate shows an unexpected increase; numerical analyses show that this increase corresponds to internode excitonic fluctuations, a precursor to a transition from massless to massive quasiparticles.
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CITATION STYLE
Hirata, M., Ishikawa, K., Matsuno, G., Kobayashi, A., Miyagawa, K., Tamura, M., … Kanoda, K. (2017). Anomalous spin correlations and excitonic instability of interacting 2D Weyl fermions. Science, 358(6369), 1403–1406. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aan5351
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