ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Nonuniform quantum-confined states and visualization of hidden defects in thin Pb(111) films

106   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Alexei Yu. Aladyshkin
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The spatial distribution of the differential conductance for ultrathin Pb films grown on Si(111)7x7 substrate is studied by means of low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy. The formation of the quantum--confined states for conduction electrons and, correspondingly, the appearance of local maxima of the differential tunneling conductance are typical for Pb films; the energy of such states is determined mainly by the local thickness of Pb film. We demonstrate that the magnitude of the tunneling conductivity within atomically flat terraces can be spatially nonuniform and the period of the small-scale modulation coincides with the period of Si(111)7x7 reconstruction. For relatively thick Pb films we observe large-scale inhomogeneities of the tunneling conductance, which reveal itself as a gradual shift of the quantized levels at a value of the order of 50 meV at distances of the order of 100 nm. We believe that such large-scale variations of the tunneling conductance and, respectively, local density of states in Pb films can be related to presence of internal defects of crystalline structure, for instance, local electrical potentials and stresses.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

The Pb/Si(111) thin films were simulated within the density functional theory (DFT). The well-known Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) version of the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and its recent nonempirical successor Wu-Cohen (WC) issue were us ed to estimate the exchange-correlation functional. Lattice parameters were calculated for Bulk of the Pb and Si compounds to obtain more reliable lattice mismatch at the interface to be consistent with our used full-potential method of calculations. The WC-GGA result predicts the lattice constants of the Pb and Si compounds better than the GGA when compared with experiment. We have found that the spin-orbit coupling (SOC) does not significantly influence the results. Our finding is in agreement with the recent observation of the Rashba-type spin-orbit splitting of quantum well states in ultrathin Pb/Si(111) films. Our result shows, in agreement with experiment, that the top site (T1) is the most stable phase. A combination of tight $sigma$ and feeble $pi$ bonds has been found at the interface, which results in a covalent Pb-Si bond. Our calculated electric field gradient (EFG) predicts quantum size effects (QSE) with respect to the number of deposited Pb layers on the Si substrate. The QSE prediction shows that the EFG dramatically drops on going from first to second layer. The EFG calculation shows that this system is not an ideal paradigm to freestanding films.
74 - A. Yu. Aladyshkin 2020
Quantum-confined electronic states such as quantum-well states (QWS) inside thin Pb(111) films and modified image-potential states (IPS) above the Pb(111) films grown on Si(111)7$times$7 substrate were studied by means of low-temperature scanning tun nelling microscopy (STM) and spectroscopy (STS) in the regime of constant current $I$. By plotting the position of the $n-$th emission resonances $U^{,}_n$ versus $n^{2/3}$ and extrapolating the linear fit for the dependence $U^{,}_n(n^{2/3})$ in the high-$n$ limit towards $n=0$, we estimate the local work function for the Pb(111) film: $Wsimeq 3.8pm 0.1,$eV. We experimentally demonstrate that modifications of the shape of the STM tip can change the number of the emission peaks associated with the resonant tunnelling via quantized IPS levels for the same Pb terrace; however it does not affect the estimate of the local work function for the flat Pb terraces. We observe that the maxima in the spectra of the differential tunnelling conductance $dI/dU$ related to both the QWS and the modified IPS resonances are less pronounced if the STM tip becomes more blunt.
Spectra of the differential tunneling conductivity for ultrathin lead films grown on Si(111)7x7 single crystals with a thickness from 9 to 50 monolayers have been studied by low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy. The presence of local maxima of the tunneling conductivity is typical for such systems. The energies of maxima of the differential conductivity are determined by the spectrum of quantum-confined states of electrons in a metallic layer and, consequently, the local thickness of the layer. It has been shown that features of the microstructure of substrates, such as steps of monatomic height, structural defects, and inclusions of other materials covered with a lead layer, can be visualized by bias-modulation scanning tunneling spectroscopy.
We present angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements of the surface states on in-situ grown (111) oriented films of Pb$_{1-x}$Sn$_{x}$Se, a three dimensional topological crystalline insulator. We observe surface states with Dirac-like di spersion at $bar{Gamma}$ and $bar{M}$ in the surface Brillouin zone, supporting recent theoretical predictions for this family of materials. We study the parallel dispersion isotropy and Dirac-point binding energy of the surface states, and perform tight-binding calculations to support our findings. The relative simplicity of the growth technique is encouraging, and suggests a clear path for future investigations into the role of strain, vicinality and alternative surface orientations in (Pb,Sn)Se compounds.
196 - Sunghun Park , H.-S. Sim 2008
We theoretically study electronic properties of a graphene sheet on xy plane in a spatially nonuniform magnetic field, $B = B_0 hat{z}$ in one domain and $B = B_1 hat{z}$ in the other domain, in the quantum Hall regime and in the low-energy limit. We find that the magnetic edge states of the Dirac fermions, formed along the boundary between the two domains, have features strongly dependent on whether $B_0$ is parallel or antiparallel to $B_1$. In the parallel case, when the Zeeman spin splitting can be ignored, the magnetic edge states originating from the $n=0$ Landau levels of the two domains have dispersionless energy levels, contrary to those from the $n e 0$ levels. Here, $n$ is the graphene Landau-level index. They become dispersive as the Zeeman splitting becomes finite or as an electrostatic step potential is additionally applied. In the antiparallel case, the $n=0$ magnetic edge states split into electron-like and hole-like current-carrying states. The energy gap between the electron-like and hole-like states can be created by the Zeeman splitting or by the step potential. These features are attributed to the fact that the pseudo-spin of the magnetic edge states couples to the direction of the magnetic field. We propose an Aharonov-Bohm interferometry setup in a graphene ribbon for experimental study of the magnetic edge states.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا