The last decade witnessed significant progress in angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and its applications. Today, ARPES experiments with 2 meV energy resolution and 0.2 • angular resolution are a reality even for photoemission on solid systems. These technological advances and the improved sample quality have enabled ARPES to emerge as a leading tool in the investigation of the high-Tc superconductors. This paper reviews the most recent ARPES results on the cuprate superconductors and their insulating parent and sister compounds, with the purpose of providing an updated summary of the extensive literature in this field. The low energy excitations are discussed with emphasis on some of the most relevant issues, such as the Fermi surface and remnant Fermi surface, the superconducting gap, the pseudogap and d-wave-like dispersion, evidence of electronic inhomogeneity and nano-scale phase separation, the emergence of coherent quasiparticles through the superconducting transition, and many-body effects in the one-particle spectral function due to the interaction of the charge with magnetic and/or lattice degrees of freedom. Given the dynamic nature of the field, we chose to focus mainly on reviewing the experimental data, as on the experimental side a general consensus has been reached whereas interpretations and related theoretical models can vary significantly. The first part of the paper introduces photoemission spectroscopy in the context of strongly interacting systems, along with an update on the state-of-the-art instrumentation. The second part provides a brief overview of the scientific issues relevant to the investigation of the low energy electronic structure by ARPES. The rest of the paper is devoted to the review of experimental results from the cuprates and the discussion is organized along conceptual lines: normal-state electronic structure, interlayer interaction, superconducting gap, coherent superconducting peak, pseudogap, electron self energy and collective modes. Within each topic, ARPES data from the various copper oxides are presented.
Three-dimensional topological insulators are a new state of quantum matter with a bulk gap and odd number of relativistic Dirac fermions on the surface. By investigating the surface state of Bi2Te3 with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we demonstrate that the surface state consists of a single nondegenerate Dirac cone. Furthermore, with appropriate hole doping, the Fermi level can be tuned to intersect only the surface states, indicating a full energy gap for the bulk states. Our results establish that Bi2Te3 is a simple model system for the three-dimensional topological insulator with a single Dirac cone on the surface. The large bulk gap of Bi2Te3 also points to promising potential for high-temperature spintronics applications.
The remarkable properties of atomically-thin semiconducting TMD layers include an indirect-to-direct bandgap crossover 1, 2, 9 , field-induced transport with high on-off ratios 16 , 3 valley selective circular dichroism [3][4][5][6] , and strong photovoltaic response 17,18 . Fundamental understanding of the electron/hole quasiparticle band structure and many-body interactions in 2D TMDs, however, is still lacking. Enhanced Coulomb interactions due to low-dimensional effects are expected to increase the quasiparticle bandgap as well as to cause electron-hole pairs to form more strongly bound excitons [10][11][12][13] . Untangling such many-body effects in single-layer TMDs requires measurement of both the electronic bandgap and the optical bandgap, the most fundamental parameters for transport and optoelectronics, respectively. The electronic bandgap (E g ) characterizes single-particle (or quasiparticle) excitations and is defined by the sum of the energies needed to separately tunnel an electron and a hole into monolayer MoSe 2 . The optical bandgap (E opt ), on the other hand, describes the energy required to create an exciton, a correlated two-particle electron-hole pair, via optical absorption. The difference in these energies (E g -E opt ) directly yields the exciton binding energy (E b ) (Fig. 2a). Here we provide evidence for Coulomb driven quasiparticle bandgap renormalization and unusually strong exciton stability in 2D TMD through direct determination of both E g and E opt via STS and PL spectroscopy, respectively. STS and PL measurements were carried out on the same high-quality sub-monolayer MoSe 2 films grown on epitaxial bilayer graphene (BLG) on a 6H-SiC(0001) substrate.Because the MoSe 2 surface coverage for our sample was ~ 0.8 ML, we were able to simultaneously image the MoSe 2 monolayer and the underlying graphene substrate using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). We experimentally investigated both the electronic structure and the optical transitions in monolayer MoSe 2 /BLG by combining STS and PL spectroscopy. Fig. 2b shows a typical STM dI/dV spectrum acquired on monolayer MoSe 2 /BLG. The observed electronic structure is dominated by a large electronic bandgap surrounded by features labeled V 1-4 in the valence band (VB) and C 1 in the conduction band (CB). The MoSe 2 band edges are best determined by taking the logarithm of dI/dV, as shown in Fig. 2d.There the VB maximum (VBM) for monolayer MoSe 2 is seen to be located at -1.55 ± 0.03 V and the CB minimum (CBM) at 0.63 ± 0.02 V. The relative position of E F (V bias = 0 V) with respect to the band edges reveals n-type doping for our samples, although with 5 a very low carrier concentration. We tentatively attribute the n-doping of our MoSe 2 samples to intrinsic point defects such as vacancies and/or lattice antisites, which have been found to be responsible for n-doping in similar materials 20 . Our STS measurements yield a value for the single-particle electronic bandgap of E g = E CBM -E VBM = 2.18 eV ± 0.04 eV. The uncertainty ...
Three-dimensional (3D) topological Dirac semimetals (TDSs) represent an unusual state of quantum matter that can be viewed as "3D graphene." In contrast to 2D Dirac fermions in graphene or on the surface of 3D topological insulators, TDSs possess 3D Dirac fermions in the bulk. By investigating the electronic structure of Na3Bi with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we detected 3D Dirac fermions with linear dispersions along all momentum directions. Furthermore, we demonstrated the robustness of 3D Dirac fermions in Na3Bi against in situ surface doping. Our results establish Na3Bi as a model system for 3D TDSs, which can serve as an ideal platform for the systematic study of quantum phase transitions between rich topological quantum states.
Coupling between electrons and phonons (lattice vibrations) drives the formation of the electron pairs responsible for conventional superconductivity 1 . The lack of direct evidence for electron-phonon coupling in the electron dynamics of the high transition temperature superconductors has driven an intensive search for an alternative mechanism. A coupling of an electron with a phonon would result in an abrupt change of its velocity and scattering rate near the phonon energy. Here we use angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy to probe electron dynamicsvelocity and scattering rate-for three different families of copper oxide superconductors. We see in all of these materials an abrupt change of electron velocity at 50-80meV, which we cannot explain by any known process other than to invoke coupling with the phonons associated with the movement of the oxygen atoms. This suggests that electron-phonon coupling strongly influences the electron dynamics in the high-temperature superconductors, and must therefore be included in any microscopic theory of superconductivity. We investigated the electronic quasiparticle dispersions in three different families of hole-doped cuprates, Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8 (Bi2212) and Pb doped Pb-Bi2212, Pb-doped Bi 2 Sr 2 CuO 6 (Pb-Bi2201) and La 2-x Sr x CuO 4 (LSCO). Except for the Bi2201 (overdoped, T c =7K) data and that in Fig. 3b, recorded at the beam-line 5.4 of the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory (SSRL), all the data were recorded at the Advanced Light Source (ALS), as detailed elsewhere 2 . The top panels of figure 1 report the momentum distribution curve (MDC) derived dispersions along the (0, 0)-(π, π) direction for LSCO (panel a) and Bi2212 (panel b) superconducting state and for Pb-Bi2201 normal state (panel c) vs the rescaled momentum, k ' , defined by normalizing to one the momentum k relative to the Fermi momentum k F , (k-k F ), at the binding energy E=170meV. A "kink" in the dispersion around 50-80meV, highlighted by thick arrows in the figure, is the many-body effect of
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