Understanding the nature of the interaction at the graphene/metal interfaces is the basis for graphene-based electron- and spin-transport devices. Here we investigate the hybridization between graphene- and metal-derived electronic states by studying the changes induced through intercalation of a pseudomorphic monolayer of Cu in between graphene and Ir(111), using scanning tunnelling microscopy and photoelectron spectroscopy in combination with density functional theory calculations. We observe the modifications in the band structure by the intercalation process and its concomitant changes in the charge distribution at the interface. Through a state-selective analysis of band hybridization, we are able to determine their contributions to the valence band of graphene giving rise to the gap opening. Our methodology reveals the mechanisms that are responsible for the modification of the electronic structure of graphene at the Dirac point, and permits to predict the electronic structure of other graphene-metal interfaces.
Time-and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (trARPES) employing a 500 kHz extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) light source operating at 21.7 eV probe photon energy is reported. Based on a high-power ytterbium laser, optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA), and ultraviolet-driven high-harmonic generation, the light source produces an isolated high-harmonic with 110 meV bandwidth and a flux of more than 10 11 photons/second on the sample. Combined with a stateof-the-art ARPES chamber, this table-top experiment allows high-repetition rate pump-probe experiments of electron dynamics in occupied and normally unoccupied (excited) states in the entire Brillouin zone and with a temporal system response function below 40 fs. function A(k,ω) and a matrix element between the initial and final state |M k if | 2 ; here k and ω denote the electron's wavevector and angular frequency, respectively. Many-body effects are encoded in the spectral function A(k,ω) and manifest themselves in renormalization of the bare electronic bands and in the observed lineshape 1 . In a trARPES experiment, the distribution I(k,ω) is collected for a series of delays (τ ) between pump and probe pulses: after perturbation, the population distribution f(k,ω,τ ) evolves towards a quasi-thermal distribution and energetically relaxes on femto-to picosecond timescales 2 . During relaxation, the concomitant many-body interactions affect the transient spectral function A(k,ω,τ ) and even the photoemission matrix elements might change, if the final state's orbital symmetry is altered 3 . trARPES accesses at once the population dynamics, the evolution of the spectral function and the evolution of matrix elements. trARPES has found increasingly successful applications in the past few decades 4-6 : among many examples, trARPES was used to study photo-induced phase transitions 7-11 and to observe electronic states above the Fermi level, unoccupied under equilibrium conditions [12][13][14][15][16] . Energy conservation in the photoemission processes imposes that a femtosecond light source for trARPES must possess a photon energy ω ph exceeding the work function Φ, which in most materials lies in the range between 4 to 6 eV. Ultraviolet femtosecond light sources are thus required for these experiments.The conservation of the electrons' in-plane momentum ( k ) in the photoemission process allows reciprocal space resolution. The advantage of a probe with high photon energy is Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena 200, 15 (2015). 79 SPECS Surface Nano Analysis GmbH, product spectrometer PHOIBOS TM 150 (2013), see
Using a combination of photoemission and x-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD), we characterize the growth and the electronic as well as magnetic structure of cobalt layers intercalated in between graphene and Ir(111). We demonstrate that magnetic ordering exists beyond one monolayer intercalation, and determine the Co orbital and spin magnetic moments. XMCD from the carbon edge shows an induced magnetic moment in the graphene layer, oriented antiparallel to that of cobalt. The XMCD experimental data are discussed in comparison to our results of first-principles electronic structure calculations. It is shown that good agreement between theory and experiment for the Co magnetic moments can be achieved when the local-spin-density approximation plus the Hubbard U (LSDA + U ) is used.
Intercalation of various elements has become a popular technique to decouple the buffer layer of epitaxial graphene on SiC(0001) from the substrate. Among many other elements, oxygen can be used to passivate the SiC interface, causing the buffer layer to transform into graphene. Here, we study a gentle oxidation of the interface by annealing buffer layer and monolayer graphene samples in water vapor. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy demonstrates the decoupling of the buffer layer from the SiC substrate. Raman spectroscopy is utilized to investigate a possible introduction of defects. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy shows that the electronic structure of the water vapor treated samples. Low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM) measurements demonstrate that the decoupling takes place without changes in the surface morphology. The LEEM reflectivity spectra are discussed in terms of two different interpretations.
Graphene formation on top of SiC(0001) by decoupling the carbon buffer layer through lithium intercalation is investigated. Low-energy electron diffraction and core-level photoemission spectroscopy results show that graphene formation already occurs at room temperature, and that the interface morphology is improved after thermal annealing. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) shows that the resulting graphene layer is strongly n-type doped, and in spite of the decoupling by lithium intercalation, a persistent interaction with the substrate imposes a superperiodicity on the graphene band structure that modulates the π band intensity and gives rise to quasi-(2×2) π replica bands. Through a comparison of the ARPES-derived band structure with density-functional-theory calculations, we assign the observed bands to SiC-derived states and interface-related ones; this assignment permits us to establish that the intercalated lithium occupies the T4 site on the topmost SiC layer
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