Abstract
The efficiency and stability of ${\mathrm{RuO}}_{2}$ in electrocatalysis has made this material a subject of intense fundamental and industrial interest. The surface functionality is rooted in its electronic and magnetic properties, determined by a complex interplay of lattice-, spin-rotational, and time-reversal symmetries, as well as the competition between Coulomb and kinetic energies. This interplay was predicted to produce a network of Dirac nodal lines (DNLs), where the valence and conduction bands touch along continuous lines in momentum space. Here we uncover direct evidence for three DNLs in ${\mathrm{RuO}}_{2}$ by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. These DNLs give rise to a flat-band surface state that is readily tuned by the electrostatic environment, and that presents an intriguing platform for exotic correlation phenomena. Our findings support high spin-Hall conductivities and bulk magnetism in ${\mathrm{RuO}}_{2}$, and are likely related to its catalytic properties.
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