39 research outputs found

    Magnetic anisotropy of spin tetramer system SeCuO3_3 studied by torque magnetometry and ESR spectroscopy

    Full text link
    We present an experimental study of macroscopic and microscopic magnetic anisotropy of a spin tetramer system SeCuO3_3 using torque magnetometry and ESR spectroscopy. Large rotation of macroscopic magnetic axes with temperature observed from torque magnetometry agrees reasonably well with the rotation of the g\textbf{g} tensor above T≳50T \gtrsim 50~K. Below 50~K, the g\textbf{g} tensor is temperature independent, while macroscopic magnetic axes continue to rotate. Additionally, the susceptibility anisotropy has a temperature dependence which cannot be reconciled with the isotropic Heisenberg model of interactions between spins. ESR linewidth analysis shows that anisotropic exchange interaction must be present in SeCuO3_3. These findings strongly support the presence of anisotropic exchange interactions in the Hamiltonian of the studied system. Below TN=8T_N=8~K, the system enters a long - range antiferromagnetically ordered state with easy axis along the ∗^* direction. Small but significant rotation of magnetic axes is also observed in the antiferromagnetically ordered state suggesting strong spin-lattice coupling in this system.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure

    In-situ exfoliation method of large-area 2D materials

    Get PDF
    The success in studying 2D materials inherently relies on producing samples of large area, and high quality enough for the experimental conditions. Because their 2D nature surface sensitive techniques such as photoemission spectroscopy , tunneling microscopy and electron diffraction, that work in ultra high vacuum (UHV) environment are prime techniques that have been employed with great success in unveiling new properties of 2D materials but it requires samples to be free of adsorbates. The technique that most easily and readily yields 2dmaterials of highest quality is indubitably mechanical exfoliation from bulk grown samples, however as this technique is traditionally done in dedicated environment, the transfer of these samples into UHV setups requires some form of surface cleaning that tempers with the sample quality. In this article, we report on a simple and general method of \textit{in-situ} mechanical exfoliation directly in UHV that yields large-area single-layered films. By employing standard UHV cleaning techniques and by purpusedly exploiting the chemical affinity between the substrate and the sample we could yield large area exfoliation of transition metal dichalcogenides. Multiple transition metal dichalcogenides, both metallic and semiconducting, are exfoliated \textit{in-situ} onto Au and Ag, and Ge. Exfoliated flakes are found to be sub-milimeter size with excellent crystallinity and purity, as evidenced by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy and low-energy electron diffraction. In addition, we demonstrate exfoliation of air-sensitive 2D materials and possibility of controlling the substrate-2D material twist angle

    Fragility of the Dirac Cone Splitting in Topological Crystalline Insulator Heterostructures

    Full text link
    The 'double Dirac cone' 2D topological interface states found on the (001) faces of topological crystalline insulators such as Pb1−x_{1-x}Snx_{x}Se feature degeneracies located away from time reversal invariant momenta, and are a manifestation of both mirror symmetry protection and valley interactions. Similar shifted degeneracies in 1D interface states have been highlighted as a potential basis for a topological transistor, but realizing such a device will require a detailed understanding of the intervalley physics involved. In addition, the operation of this or similar devices outside of ultra-high vacuum will require encapsulation, and the consequences of this for the topological interface state must be understood. Here we address both topics for the case of 2D surface states using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We examine bulk Pb1−x_{1-x}Snx_{x}Se(001) crystals overgrown with PbSe, realizing trivial/topological heterostructures. We demonstrate that the valley interaction that splits the two Dirac cones at each Xˉ\bar{X} is extremely sensitive to atomic-scale details of the surface, exhibiting non-monotonic changes as PbSe deposition proceeds. This includes an apparent total collapse of the splitting for sub-monolayer coverage, eliminating the Lifshitz transition. For a large overlayer thickness we observe quantized PbSe states, possibly reflecting a symmetry confinement mechanism at the buried topological interface

    Crossover from 2D ferromagnetic insulator to wide bandgap quantum anomalous Hall insulator in ultra-thin MnBi2Te4

    Full text link
    Intrinsic magnetic topological insulators offer low disorder and large magnetic bandgaps for robust magnetic topological phases operating at higher temperatures. By controlling the layer thickness, emergent phenomena such as the Quantum Anomalous Hall (QAH) effect and axion insulator phases have been realised. These observations occur at temperatures significantly lower than the Neel temperature of bulk MnBi2Te4, and measurement of the magnetic energy gap at the Dirac point in ultra-thin MnBi2Te4 has yet to be achieved. Critical to achieving the promise of this system is a direct measurement of the layer-dependent energy gap and verifying whether the gap is magnetic in the QAH phase. Here we utilise temperature dependent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to study epitaxial ultra-thin MnBi2Te4. We directly observe a layer dependent crossover from a 2D ferromagnetic insulator with a bandgap greater than 780 meV in one septuple layer (1 SL) to a QAH insulator with a large energy gap (>100 meV) at 8 K in 3 and 5 SL MnBi2Te4. The QAH gap is confirmed to be magnetic in origin, as it abruptly diminishes with increasing temperature above 8 K. The direct observation of a large magnetic energy gap in the QAH phase of few-SL MnBi2Te4 is promising for further increasing the operating temperature of QAH materials

    Spin and valley control of free carriers in single-layer WS2

    Get PDF
    Data are available from http://dx.doi.org/10.17630/a25b95c6-b9e8-4ecf-9559-bb09e58a7835The semiconducting single-layer transition metal dichalcogenides have been identified as ideal materials for accessing and manipulating spin- and valley-quantum numbers due to a set of favorable optical selection rules in these materials. Here, we apply time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to directly probe optically excited free carriers in the electronic band structure of a high quality single layer (SL) of WS2 grown on Ag(111). We present a momentum resolved analysis of the optically generated free hole density around the valence band maximum of SL WS2 for linearly and circularly polarized optical excitations. We observe that the excited free holes are valley polarized within the upper spin-split branch of the valence band, which implies that the photon energy and polarization of the excitation permit selective excitations of free electron-hole pairs with a given spin and within a single valley.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Increasing the Rate of Magnesium Intercalation Underneath Epitaxial Graphene on 6H-SiC(0001)

    Full text link
    Magnesium intercalated 'quasi-freestanding' bilayer graphene on 6H-SiC(0001) (Mg-QFSBLG) has many favorable properties (e.g., highly n-type doped, relatively stable in ambient conditions). However, intercalation of Mg underneath monolayer graphene is challenging, requiring multiple intercalation steps. Here, we overcome these challenges and subsequently increase the rate of Mg intercalation by laser patterning (ablating) the graphene to form micron-sized discontinuities. We then use low energy electron diffraction to verify Mg-intercalation and conversion to Mg-QFSBLG, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to determine the Mg intercalation rate for patterned and non-patterned samples. By modeling Mg intercalation with the Verhulst equation, we find that the intercalation rate increase for the patterned sample is 4.5±\pm1.7. Since the edge length of the patterned sample is ≈\approx5.2 times that of the non-patterned sample, the model implies that the increased intercalation rate is proportional to the increase in edge length. Moreover, Mg intercalation likely begins at graphene discontinuities in pristine samples (not step edges or flat terraces), where the 2D-like crystal growth of Mg-silicide proceeds. Our laser patterning technique may enable the rapid intercalation of other atomic or molecular species, thereby expanding upon the library of intercalants used to modify the characteristics of graphene, or other 2D materials and heterostructures.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure

    Quasi-free-standing AA-stacked bilayer graphene induced by calcium intercalation of the graphene-silicon carbide interface

    Full text link
    We study quasi-freestanding bilayer graphene on silicon carbide intercalated by calcium. The intercalation, and subsequent changes to the system, were investigated by low-energy electron diffraction, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and density-functional theory (DFT). Calcium is found to intercalate only at the graphene-SiC interface, completely displacing the hydrogen terminating SiC. As a consequence, the system becomes highly n-doped. Comparison to DFT calculations shows that the band dispersion, as determined by ARPES, deviates from the band structure expected for Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene. Instead, the electronic structure closely matches AA-stacked bilayer graphene on Ca-terminated SiC, indicating a spontaneous transition from AB- to AA-stacked bilayer graphene following calcium intercalation of the underlying graphene-SiC interface.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure

    Electronic bandstructure of in-plane ferroelectric van der Waals β′−In2Se3\beta '-In_{2}Se_{3}

    Full text link
    Layered indium selenides (In2Se3In_{2}Se_{3}) have recently been discovered to host robust out-of-plane and in-plane ferroelectricity in the α\alpha and β\beta' phases, respectively. In this work, we utilise angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy to directly measure the electronic bandstructure of β′−In2Se3\beta '-In_{2}Se_{3}, and compare to hybrid density functional theory (DFT) calculations. In agreement with DFT, we find the band structure is highly two-dimensional, with negligible dispersion along the c-axis. Due to n-type doping we are able to observe the conduction band minima, and directly measure the minimum indirect (0.97 eV) and direct (1.46 eV) bandgaps. We find the Fermi surface in the conduction band is characterized by anisotropic electron pockets with sharp in-plane dispersion about the M‾\overline{M} points, yielding effective masses of 0.21 m0m_{0} along KM‾\overline{KM} and 0.33 m0m_{0} along ΓM‾\overline{\Gamma M}. The measured band structure is well supported by hybrid density functional theory calculations. The highly two-dimensional (2D) bandstructure with moderate bandgap and small effective mass suggest that β′−In2Se3\beta'-In_{2}Se_{3} is a potentially useful new van der Waals semiconductor. This together with its ferroelectricity makes it a viable material for high-mobility ferroelectric-photovoltaic devices, with applications in non-volatile memory switching and renewable energy technologies.Comment: 19 pages, 4 + 1 figures; typos corrected;added references; updated figures & discussion to reflect changes in mode
    corecore