Accessing the spectral function in a current-carrying device
Accessing the spectral function in a current-carrying device
The presence of an electrical transport current in a material is one of the simplest and most important realisations of non-equilibrium physics. The current density breaks the crystalline symmetry and can give rise to dramatic phenomena, such as sliding charge density waves [1], insulator-to-metal transitions [2,3] or gap openings in topologically protected states [4]. Almost nothing is known about how a current influences the electron spectral function, which characterizes most of the solid's electronic, optical and chemical properties. Here we show that angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy with a nano-scale light spot (nanoARPES) provides not only a wealth of information on local equilibrium properties, but also opens the possibility to access the local non-equilibrium spectral function in the presence of a transport current. Unifying spectroscopic and transport measurements in this way allows non-invasive local measurements of the composition, structure, many-body effects and carrier mobility in the presence of high current densities.
Charlotte E. Sanders、Philip Hofmann、Kenji Watanabe、Alfred J. H. Jones、Ryan Muzzio、Jill A. Miwa、Simranjeet Singh、Cephise Cacho、S?ren Ulstrup、Klara Volckaert、Davide Curcio、Deepnarayan Biswas、Jyoti Katoch、Pavel Dudin、Takashi Taniguchi
10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.236403
电工基础理论物理学电子技术概论
Charlotte E. Sanders,Philip Hofmann,Kenji Watanabe,Alfred J. H. Jones,Ryan Muzzio,Jill A. Miwa,Simranjeet Singh,Cephise Cacho,S?ren Ulstrup,Klara Volckaert,Davide Curcio,Deepnarayan Biswas,Jyoti Katoch,Pavel Dudin,Takashi Taniguchi.Accessing the spectral function in a current-carrying device[EB/OL].(2020-01-27)[2025-05-26].https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.09891.点此复制
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