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Creators/Authors contains: "Marques dos Santos Vieira, Francisco"

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  1. Abstract Dirac and Weyl semimetals are a central topic of contemporary condensed matter physics, and the discovery of new compounds with Dirac/Weyl electronic states is crucial to the advancement of topological materials and quantum technologies. Here we show a widely applicable strategy that uses high configuration entropy to engineer relativistic electronic states. We take theAMnSb2(A= Ba, Sr, Ca, Eu, and Yb) Dirac material family as an example and demonstrate that mixing of Ba, Sr, Ca, Eu and Yb at theAsite generates the compound (Ba0.38Sr0.14Ca0.16Eu0.16Yb0.16)MnSb2(denoted asA5MnSb2), giving access to a polar structure with a space group that is not present in any of the parent compounds.A5MnSb2is an entropy-stabilized phase that preserves its linear band dispersion despite considerable lattice disorder. Although bothA5MnSb2andAMnSb2have quasi-two-dimensional crystal structures, the two-dimensional Dirac states in the pristineAMnSb2evolve into a highly anisotropic quasi-three-dimensional Dirac state triggered by local structure distortions in the high-entropy phase, which is revealed by Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations measurements. 
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  2. Abstract High‐entropy materials defy historical materials design paradigms by leveraging chemical disorder to kinetically stabilize novel crystalline solid solutions comprised of many end‐members. Formulational diversity results in local crystal structures that are seldom found in conventional materials and can strongly influence macroscopic physical properties. Thermodynamically prescribed chemical flexibility provides a means to tune such properties. Additionally, kinetic metastability results in many possible atomic arrangements, including both solid‐solution configurations and heterogeneous phase assemblies, depending on synthesis conditions. Local disorder induced by metastability, and extensive cation solubilities allowed by thermodynamics combine to give many high‐entropy oxide systems utility as electrochemical, magnetic, thermal, dielectric, and optical materials. Though high‐entropy materials research is maturing rapidly, much remains to be understood and many compositions still await discovery, exploration, and implementation. 
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