The interfaces between two condensed phases often exhibit emergent physical
properties that can lead to new physics and novel device applications, and are
the subject of intense study in many disciplines. We here apply novel
experimental and theoretical techniques to the characterization of one such
interesting interface system: the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) formed in
multilayers consisting of SrTiO3 (STO) and GdTiO3 (GTO). This system has
been the subject of multiple studies recently and shown to exhibit very high
carrier charge densities and ferromagnetic effects, among other intriguing
properties. We have studied a 2DEG-forming multilayer of the form [6 unit cells
STO/3 unit cells of GTO]20 using a unique array of photoemission
techniques including soft and hard x-ray excitation, soft x-ray angle-resolved
photoemission, core-level spectroscopy, resonant excitation, and standing-wave
effects, as well as theoretical calculations of the electronic structure at
several levels and of the actual photoemission process. Standing-wave
measurements below and above a strong resonance have been introduced as a
powerful method for studying the 2DEG depth distribution. We have thus
characterized the spatial and momentum properties of this 2DEG with
unprecedented detail, determining via depth-distribution measurements that it
is spread throughout the 6 u.c. layer of STO, and measuring the momentum
dispersion of its states. The experimental results are supported in several
ways by theory, leading to a much more complete picture of the nature of this
2DEG, and suggesting that oxygen vacancies are not the origin of it. Similar
multi-technique photoemission studies of such states at buried interfaces,
combined with comparable theory, will be a very fruitful future approach for
exploring and modifying the fascinating world of buried-interface physics and
chemistry.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure