205 research outputs found
Angle-resolved photoemission study of the role of nesting and orbital orderings in the antiferromagnetic phase of BaFe2As2
We present a detailed comparison of the electronic structure of BaFe2As2 in
its paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic (AFM) phases, through angle-resolved
photoemission studies. Using different experimental geometries, we resolve the
full elliptic shape of the electron pockets, including parts of dxy symmetry
along its major axis that are usually missing. This allows us to define
precisely how the hole and electron pockets are nested and how the different
orbitals evolve at the transition. We conclude that the imperfect nesting
between hole and electron pockets explains rather well the formation of gaps
and residual metallic droplets in the AFM phase, provided the relative parity
of the different bands is taken into account. Beyond this nesting picture, we
observe shifts and splittings of numerous bands at the transition. We show that
the splittings are surface sensitive and probably not a reliable signature of
the magnetic order. On the other hand, the shifts indicate a significant
redistribution of the orbital occupations at the transition, especially within
the dxz/dyz system, which we discuss
Quasiparticles dynamics in high-temperature superconductors far from equilibrium: an indication of pairing amplitude without phase coherence
We perform time resolved photoelectron spectroscopy measurements of optimally
doped \tn{Bi}_2\tn{Sr}_2\tn{CaCu}_2\tn{O}_{8+\delta} (Bi-2212) and
\tn{Bi}_2\tn{Sr}_{2-x}\tn{La}_{x}\tn{Cu}\tn{O}_{6+\delta} (Bi-2201). The
electrons dynamics show that inelastic scattering by nodal quasiparticles
decreases when the temperature is lowered below the critical value of the
superconducting phase transition. This drop of electronic dissipation is
astonishingly robust and survives to photoexcitation densities much larger than
the value sustained by long-range superconductivity. The unconventional
behaviour of quasiparticle scattering is ascribed to superconducting
correlations extending on a length scale comparable to the inelastic path. Our
measurements indicate that strongly driven superconductors enter in a regime
without phase coherence but finite pairing amplitude. The latter vanishes near
to the critical temperature and has no evident link with the pseudogap observed
by Angle Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy (ARPES).Comment: 7 pages, 5 Figure
Giant Anisotropy of Spin-Orbit Splitting at the Bismuth Surface
We investigate the bismuth (111) surface by means of time and angle resolved
photoelectron spectroscopy. The parallel detection of the surface states below
and above the Fermi level reveals a giant anisotropy of the Spin-Orbit (SO)
spitting. These strong deviations from the Rashba-like coupling cannot be
treated in perturbation theory. Instead, first
principle calculations could accurately reproduce the experimental dispersion
of the electronic states. Our analysis shows that the giant anisotropy of the
SO splitting is due to a large out-of plane buckling of the spin and orbital
texture.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Band structure parameters of metallic diamond from angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
International audienceThe electronic band structure of heavily boron doped diamond was investigated by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy on (100)-oriented epilayers. A unique set of Luttinger parameters was deduced from a comparison of the experimental band structure of metallic diamond along the Delta (GammaX) and Sigma(GammaK) high-symmetry directions of the reciprocal space, with theoretical band structure calculations performed both within the local density approximation and by an analytical k·p approach. In this way, we were able to describe the experimental band structure over a large three-dimensional region of the reciprocal space and to estimate hole effective masses in agreement with previous theoretical and experimental papers
Significant reduction of electronic correlations upon isovalent Ru substitution of BaFe2As2
We present a detailed investigation of Ba(Fe0.65Ru0.35)2As2 by transport
measurements and Angle Resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We observe that Fe
and Ru orbitals hybridize to form a coherent electronic structure and that Ru
does not induce doping. The number of holes and electrons, deduced from the
area of the Fermi Surface pockets, are both about twice larger than in
BaFe2As2. The contribution of both carriers to the transport is evidenced by a
change of sign of the Hall coefficient with decreasing temperature. Fermi
velocities increase significantly with respect to BaFe2As2, suggesting a
significant reduction of correlation effects. This may be a key to understand
the appearance of superconductivity at the expense of magnetism in undoped iron
pnictides
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