No Arabic abstract
Using Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Spectroscopy, we probe the electronic structures of single layer ${small MoS_2}$ on graphite. We show that the quasiparticle energy gap of single layer ${small MoS_2}$ is 2.15 $pm$ 0.07 eV at 77 K. Combining with temperature dependent photoluminescence studies, we deduce an exciton binding energy of 0.22 $pm$ 0.1 eV, a value that is much lower than current theoretical predictions. Consistent with theoretical predictions we directly observed metallic edge states of single layer ${small MoS_2}$. In the bulk region of ${small MoS_2}$, the Fermi level is located at 1.8 eV above the valence band maximum, possibly due to the formation of a graphite/${small MoS_2}$ heterojunction. At the edge, however, we observe an upward band bending of 0.6 eV within a short depletion length of about 5 nm, analogous to the phenomena of Fermi level pinning of a 3D semiconductor by metallic surface states.
The band alignment of semiconductor-metal interfaces plays a vital role in modern electronics, but remains difficult to predict theoretically and measure experimentally. For interfaces with strong band bending a main difficulty originates from the in-built potentials which lead to broadened and shifted band spectra in spectroscopy measurements. In this work we present a method to resolve the band alignment of buried semiconductor-metal interfaces using core level photoemission spectroscopy and self-consistent electronic structure simulations. As a proof of principle we apply the method to a clean in-situ grown InAs(100)/Al interface, a system with a strong in-built band bending. Due to the high signal-to-noise ratio of the core level spectra the proposed methodology can be used on previously inaccessible semiconductor-metal interfaces and support targeted design of novel hybrid devices and form the foundation for a interface parameter database for specified synthesis processes of semiconductor-metal systems.
Tunneling atomic force microscopy (TUNA) was used at ambient conditions to measure the current-voltage ($I$-$V$) characteristics at clean surfaces of highly oriented graphite samples with Bernal and rhombohedral stacking orders. The characteristic curves measured on Bernal-stacked graphite surfaces can be understood with an ordinary self-consistent semiconductor modeling and quantum mechanical tunneling current derivations. We show that the absence of a voltage region without measurable current in the $I$-$V$ spectra is not a proof of the lack of an energy band gap. It can be induced by a surface band bending due to a finite contact potential between tip and sample surface. Taking this into account in the model, we succeed to obtain a quantitative agreement between simulated and measured tunnel spectra for band gaps $(12 ldots 37)$,meV, in agreement to those extracted from the exponential temperature decrease of the longitudinal resistance measured in graphite samples with Bernal stacking order. In contrast, the surface of relatively thick graphite samples with rhombohedral stacking reveals the existence of a maximum in the first derivative $dI/dV$, a behavior compatible with the existence of a flat band. The characteristics of this maximum are comparable to those obtained at low temperatures with similar techniques.
A combined experimental and theoretical study is presented of the band gap of AlInN, confirming the breakdown of the virtual crystal approximation (VCA) for the conduction and valence band edges. Composition dependent bowing parameters for these quantities are extracted. Additionally, composition dependent band offsets for GaN/AlInN systems are provided. We show that local strain and built-in fields affect the band edges significantly, leading to optical polarization switching at much lower In composition than expected from a VCA approach.
The surface band bending tunes considerably the surface band structures and transport properties in topological insulators. We present a direct measurement of the band bending on the Bi2Se3 by using the bulk sensitive angular-resolved hard x-ray photospectroscopy (HAXPES). We tracked the depth dependence of the energy shift of Bi and Se core states. We estimate that the band bending extends up to about 20 nm into the bulk with an amplitude of 0.23--0.26 eV, consistent with profiles previously deduced from the binding energies of surface states in this material.
Monolayer 1T-WTe2 is a quantum spin Hall insulator with a gapped bulk and gapless helical edge states persisting to temperatures around 100 K. Recent studies have revealed a topological-to-trivial phase transition as well the emergence of an unconventional, potentially topological superconducting state upon tuning the carrier concentration with gating. However, despite extensive studies, the effects of gating on the band structure and the helical edge states have not yet been established. In this work we present a combined low-temperature STM and first principles study of back-gated monolayer 1T-WTe2 films grown on graphene. Consistent with a quantum spin Hall system, the films show well-defined bulk gaps and clear edge states that span the gap. By directly measuring the density of states with STM spectroscopy, we show that the bulk band gap magnitude shows substantial changes with applied gate voltage, which is contrary to the naive expectation that a gate would rigidly shift the bands relative to the Fermi level. To explain our data, we carry out density functional theory and model Hamiltonian calculations which show that a gate electric field causes doping and inversion symmetry breaking which polarizes and spin-splits the bulk bands. Interestingly, the calculated spin splitting from the effective Rashba-like spin-orbit coupling can be in the tens of meV for the electric fields in the experiment, which may be useful for spintronics applications. Our work reveals the strong effect of electric fields on the bulk band structure of monolayer 1T-WTe2, which will play a critical role in our understanding of gate-induced phenomena in this system.