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ARPES (Angle Resolved PhotoEmission Spectroscopy)

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An atomically flat sample is illuminated by a beam of monochromatic light. ... Point #1: The flat surface of the sample has translational symmetry. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ARPES (Angle Resolved PhotoEmission Spectroscopy)


1
ARPES (Angle Resolved PhotoEmission Spectroscopy)
  • Michael Browne
  • 11/19/2007

2
What is ARPES?
  • An atomically flat sample is illuminated by a
    beam of monochromatic light.
  • Due to the photoelectric effect, the sample emits
    electrons.
  • The kinetic energy and direction of these
    electrons are measured by the apparatus.
  • This data reflects the structure of the Fermi
    surface within the material.

3
What is ARPES?
4
The ARPES Apparatus at SSRL
  • Photon energies of 12-30 eV
  • Angular resolution of
  • Energy resolution of 2-10 MeV

5
The Photoelectric Effect
  • Explained by Einstein (1905)
  • More generally,
  • where is the binding
  • energy of the electron.

6
Photoemission Spectra
  • The work function is known/measurable.
  • The photon energy is known.
  • We can calculate the energy of the electron in
    the solid!

7
Theoretical Basis of ARPES
  • Point 1 The flat surface of the sample has
    translational symmetry.
  • Therefore, as electrons escape from the solid,
    linear momentum is conserved parallel to the
    surface.

8
Theoretical Basis of ARPES
  • Point 2
  • (See Table 2.1)
  • The photon momentum is small and can be
    neglected!

9
Theoretical Basis of ARPES
  • Conclusion ARPES is directly measuring the
    components of electron momentum that are parallel
    to the surface!
  • How many electrons of a given momentum will ARPES
    measure?

10
Theoretical Basis of ARPES
  • Theoretically, the measured intensity can be
    described as
  • where depends on the photon.
  • is the Fermi-Dirac
    distribution.
  • is the one-particle
    spectral function.

11
What is ARPES used for?
  • ARPES is an almost ideal tool for imaging the
    Fermi surface of 1-D and 2-D solids.
  • Since many of the high temperature
    superconductors are essentially 2-D materials,
    much of the work in this field is done using
    ARPES.

12
Momentum and Binding Energy
13
Direct k Space Imaging
14
Fermi Surface Images
15
Band Structure Images
16
Validation of Predictions
Theoretical Calculation
  • ARPES Measurement

17
Disadvantages of ARPES
  • Must be done in an ultrahigh vacuum (otherwise
    electrons would collide) so cannot measure
    pressure effects.
  • Cannot measure magnetic effects (a magnetic field
    would deflect electrons).
  • Only measures surface effects in the top 10 Å or
    so.

18
Further Advances
  • Laser ARPES lower energy means sharper pictures
  • (image of
  • in nodal
  • direction)

19
Credits
  • Slide 1,13 http//www.coe.berkeley.edu/AST/srms/2
    007/Lec18.pdf
  • Slide 3-5,12 http//www.physics.ubc.ca/quantmat/
    ARPES/PRESENTATIONS/Talks/ARPES_Intro.pdf
  • Slide 14, 15 http//arpes.phys.tohoku.ac.jp/conte
    nts/calendar-e.html
  • Slide 16 http//www-ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/resear
    ch/highlights_archive/high-tc.html
  • Slide 18 http//spot.colorado.edu/dessau/index.h
    tml
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