125 research outputs found
Tuning independently Fermi energy and spin splitting in Rashba systems: Ternary surface alloys on Ag(111)
By detailed first-principles calculations we show that the Fermi energy and
the Rashba splitting in disordered ternary surface alloys (BiPbSb)/Ag(111) can
be independently tuned by choosing the concentrations of Bi and Pb. The
findings are explained by three fundamental mechanisms, namely the relaxation
of the adatoms, the strength of the atomic spin-orbit coupling, and band
filling. By mapping the Rashba characteristics,i.e.the splitting and the Rashba
energy, and the Fermi energy of the surface states in the complete range of
concentrations. Our results suggest to investigate experimentally effects which
rely on the Rashba spin-orbit coupling in dependence on spin-orbit splitting
and band filling.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Formation of the BiAg2 surface alloy on lattice-mismatched interfaces
We report on the growth of a monolayer-thick BiAg2 surface alloy on thin Ag films grown on Pt(111) and Cu(111). Using low energy electron diffraction (LEED), angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) we show that the surface structure of the 13 ML Bi/x-ML Ag/Pt(111) system (x=2) is strongly affected by the annealing temperature required to form the alloy. As judged from the characteristic (3Ă3)R30 LEED pattern, the BiAg2 alloy is partially formed at room temperature. A gentle, gradual increase in the annealing temperatures successively results in the formation of a pure BiAg2 phase, a combination of that phase with a (2Ă2) superstructure, and finally the pure (2Ă2) phase, which persists at higher annealing temperatures. These results complement recent work reporting the (2Ă2) as a predominant phase, and attributing the absence of BiAg2 alloy to the strained Ag/Pt interface. Likewise, we show that the growth of the BiAg2 alloy on similarly lattice-mismatched 1 and 2 ML Ag-Cu(111) interfaces also requires a low annealing temperature, whilst higher temperatures result in BiAg2 clustering and the formation of a BiCu2 alloy. The demonstration that the BiAg2 alloy can be formed on thin Ag films on different substrates presenting a strained interface has the prospect of serving as bases for technologically relevant systems, such as Rashba alloys interfaced with magnetic and semiconductor substrates
Systematics of electronic and magnetic properties in the transition metal doped SbTe quantum anomalous Hall platform
The quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) has recently been reported to emerge
in magnetically-doped topological insulators. Although its general
phenomenology is well established, the microscopic origin is far from being
properly understood and controlled. Here we report on a detailed and systematic
investigation of transition-metal (TM)-doped SbTe. By combining density
functional theory (DFT) calculations with complementary experimental
techniques, i.e., scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), resonant photoemission
(resPES), and x-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD), we provide a complete
spectroscopic characterization of both electronic and magnetic properties. Our
results reveal that the TM dopants not only affect the magnetic state of the
host material, but also significantly alter the electronic structure by
generating impurity-derived energy bands. Our findings demonstrate the
existence of a delicate interplay between electronic and magnetic properties in
TM-doped TIs. In particular, we find that the fate of the topological surface
states critically depends on the specific character of the TM impurity: while
V- and Fe-doped SbTe display resonant impurity states in the vicinity
of the Dirac point, Cr and Mn impurities leave the energy gap unaffected. The
single-ion magnetic anisotropy energy and easy axis, which control the magnetic
gap opening and its stability, are also found to be strongly TM
impurity-dependent and can vary from in-plane to out-of-plane depending on the
impurity and its distance from the surface. Overall, our results provide
general guidelines for the realization of a robust QAHE in TM-doped
SbTe in the ferromagnetic state.Comment: 40 pages, 13 figure
Surface states and Rashba-type spin polarization in antiferromagnetic MnBiTe
The layered van der Waals antiferromagnet MnBiTe has been predicted
to combine the band ordering of archetypical topological insulators such as
BiTe with the magnetism of Mn, making this material a viable candidate
for the realization of various magnetic topological states. We have
systematically investigated the surface electronic structure of
MnBiTe(0001) single crystals by use of spin- and angle-resolved
photoelectron spectroscopy experiments. In line with theoretical predictions,
the results reveal a surface state in the bulk band gap and they provide
evidence for the influence of exchange interaction and spin-orbit coupling on
the surface electronic structure.Comment: Revised versio
Spin-orbit density wave induced hidden topological order in URu2Si2
The conventional order parameters in quantum matters are often characterized
by 'spontaneous' broken symmetries. However, sometimes the broken symmetries
may blend with the invariant symmetries to lead to mysterious emergent phases.
The heavy fermion metal URu2Si2 is one such example, where the order parameter
responsible for a second-order phase transition at Th = 17.5 K has remained a
long-standing mystery. Here we propose via ab-initio calculation and effective
model that a novel spin-orbit density wave in the f-states is responsible for
the hidden-order phase in URu2Si2. The staggered spin-orbit order 'spontaneous'
breaks rotational, and translational symmetries while time-reversal symmetry
remains intact. Thus it is immune to pressure, but can be destroyed by magnetic
field even at T = 0 K, that means at a quantum critical point. We compute
topological index of the order parameter to show that the hidden order is
topologically invariant. Finally, some verifiable predictions are presented.Comment: (v2) Substantially modified from v1, more calculation and comparison
with experiments are include
Momentum-space signatures of Berry flux monopoles in the Weyl semimetal TaAs
Since the early days of Dirac flux quantization, magnetic monopoles have been sought after as a potential corollary of quantized electric charge. As opposed to magnetic monopoles embedded into the theory of electromagnetism, Weyl semimetals (WSM) exhibit Berry flux monopoles in reciprocal parameter space. As a function of crystal momentum, such monopoles locate at the crossing point of spin-polarized bands forming the Weyl cone. Here, we report momentum-resolved spectroscopic signatures of Berry flux monopoles in TaAs as a paradigmatic WSM. We carried out angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy at bulk-sensitive soft X-ray energies (SX-ARPES) combined with photoelectron spin detection and circular dichroism. The experiments reveal large spin- and orbital-angular-momentum (SAM and OAM) polarizations of the Weyl-fermion states, resulting from the broken crystalline inversion symmetry in TaAs. Supported by first-principles calculations, our measurements image signatures of a topologically non-trivial winding of the OAM at the Weyl nodes and unveil a chirality-dependent SAM of the Weyl bands. Our results provide directly bulk-sensitive spectroscopic support for the non-trivial band topology in the WSM TaAs, promising to have profound implications for the study of quantum-geometric effects in solids
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