Abstract

Employing a combination of first-principles calculations and low-energy effective models, we present a comprehensive investigation on the electronic structure of Pb10(PO4)6O4, which exhibits remarkable quasi-one-dimensional topological flat-band around the Fermi level. These flat bands predominantly originate from the px/py orbitals of the oxygen molecules chain at the fully-occupied 4e Wyckoff positions and thus can be well-captured by a minimal four-band tight-binding model. Furthermore, the abundant crystal symmetry inherent in Pb10(PO4)6O4 provides an ideal platform for the emergence of various quasi-fermions characterized by different dispersion, degeneracy, and dimensionality. These include a 0D four-fold degenerate Dirac fermion exhibiting quadratic dispersion, a 1D quadratic/linear nodal-line fermion along symmetric k-paths, a 1D hourglass nodal-line (HNL) fermion associated with the Dirac fermion, and a 2D symmetry-enforced nodal surface located on the kz = π plane. Moreover, when considering the weak ferromagnetic order, Pb10(PO4)6O4 transforms into a rare semi-half-metal, which is characterized by the presence of Dirac fermion and HNL fermion at the Fermi level for a single spin channel exhibiting 100 % spin polarization. Our findings reveal the rarely coexistence of flat bands, diverse topological semimetal states and ferromagnetism in Pb10(PO4)6O4, which may provide valuable insights for further exploring the intriguing interplay between superconductivity and exotic electronic states.

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