The anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) in magnetic materials, resulting from inverted band topology, has emerged as a key adjustable function in spin-torque devices and advanced magnetic sensors. Among systems with near-half-metallicity and broken time-reversal symmetry, cobalt disulfide (CoS) has proven to be a material capable of significantly enhancing its AHC. In this study, the AHC of CoS is empirically assessed by manipulating the chemical potential through Fe- (hole) and Ni- (electron) doping. The primary mechanism underlying the colossal AHC is identified through the application of density functional theory and tight-binding analyses. The main source of this substantial AHC is traced to four spin-polarized massive Dirac dispersions in the k = 0 plane of the Brillouin zone, located slightly below the Fermi level. In CoFeS, the AHC, which is directly proportional to the momentum-space integral of the Berry curvature (BC), reached a record-breaking value of 2507 Ωcm. This is because the BCs of the four Dirac dispersions all exhibit the same sign, a consequence of the d-wave-like spin-orbit coupling among spin-polarized e orbitals.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11132085PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202307288DOI Listing

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