Here, we present a detailed study on the temperature and angular dependence
of the Shubnikov-de-Haas (SdH) effect in the semi-metal WTe2. This compound
was recently shown to display a very large non-saturating magnetoresistance
which was attributed to nearly perfectly compensated densities of electrons and
holes. We observe four fundamental SdH frequencies and attribute them to
spin-orbit split, electron- and hole-like, Fermi surface (FS) cross-sectional
areas. Their angular dependence seems consistent with ellipsoidal FSs with
volumes suggesting a modest excess in the density of electrons with respect to
that of the holes. We show that density functional theory (DFT) calculations
fail to correctly describe the FSs of WTe2. When their cross-sectional areas
are adjusted to reflect the experimental data, the resulting volumes of the
electron/hole FSs obtained from the DFT calculations would imply a pronounced
imbalance between the densities of electrons and holes. We find evidence for
field-dependent Fermi surface cross-sectional areas by fitting the oscillatory
component superimposed onto the magnetoresistivity signal to several
Lifshitz-Kosevich components. We also observe a pronounced field-induced
renormalization of the effective masses. Taken together, our observations
suggest that the electronic structure of WTe2 evolves with the magnetic
field. This evolution might be a factor contributing to its pronounced
magnetoresistivity.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure