scholarly journals Unraveling intrinsic correlation effects with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (46) ◽  
pp. 28596-28602
Author(s):  
Jianqiang Sky Zhou ◽  
Lucia Reining ◽  
Alessandro Nicolaou ◽  
Azzedine Bendounan ◽  
Kari Ruotsalainen ◽  
...  

Interaction effects can change materials properties in intriguing ways, and they have, in general, a huge impact on electronic spectra. In particular, satellites in photoemission spectra are pure many-body effects, and their study is of increasing interest in both experiment and theory. However, the intrinsic spectral function is only a part of a measured spectrum, and it is notoriously difficult to extract this information, even for simple metals. Our joint experimental and theoretical study of the prototypical simple metal aluminum demonstrates how intrinsic satellite spectra can be extracted from measured data using angular resolution in photoemission. A nondispersing satellite is detected and explained by electron–electron interactions and the thermal motion of the atoms. Additional nondispersing intensity comes from the inelastic scattering of the outgoing photoelectron. The ideal intrinsic spectral function, instead, has satellites that disperse both in energy and in shape. Theory and the information extracted from experiment describe these features with very good agreement.

2D Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanna Sitnicka ◽  
Kyungwha Park ◽  
Paweł Skupiński ◽  
Krzysztof Grasza ◽  
Anna Reszka ◽  
...  

Abstract MnBi2Te4/(Bi2Te3)n materials system has recently generated strong interest as a natural platform for realization of the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state. The system is magnetically much better ordered than substitutionally doped materials, however, the detrimental effects of certain disorders are becoming increasingly acknowledged. Here, from compiling structural, compositional, and magnetic metrics of disorder in ferromagnetic MnBi2Te4/(Bi2Te3)n it is found that migration of Mn between MnBi2Te4 septuple layers (SLs) and otherwise non-magnetic Bi2Te3 quintuple layers (QLs) has systemic consequences - it induces ferromagnetic coupling of Mn-depleted SLs with Mn-doped QLs, seen in ferromagnetic resonance as an acoustic and optical resonance mode of the two coupled spin subsystems. Even for a large SL separation (n ≳ 4 QLs) the structure cannot be considered as a stack of uncoupled two-dimensional layers. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and density functional theory studies show that Mn disorder within an SL causes delocalization of electron wave functions and a change of the surface band structure as compared to the ideal MnBi2Te4/(Bi2Te3)n. These findings highlight the critical importance of inter- and intra-SL disorder towards achieving new QAH platforms as well as exploring novel axion physics in intrinsic topological magnets.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Setti Thirupathaiah ◽  
Y. S. Kushnirenk ◽  
Klaus Koepernik ◽  
B. R. Piening ◽  
Bernd Buechner ◽  
...  

We show that the cubic compound PbBi2 is a topological semimetal hosting a sixfold band touching point in close proximity to the Fermi level. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we map the band structure of the system, which is in good agreement with results from density functional theory. Further, by employing a low energy effective Hamiltonian valid close to the crossing point, we study the effect of a magnetic field on the sixfold fermion. The latter splits into a total of twenty Weyl cones for a Zeeman field oriented in the diagonal, (111) direction. Our results mark cubic PbBi2 as an ideal candidate to study the transport properties of gapless topological systems beyond Dirac and Weyl semimetals.


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