Visualizing electrostatic gating effects in two-dimensional heterostructures

The ability to directly observe electronic band structure in modern nanoscale field-effect devices could transform understanding of their physics and function. One could, for example, visualize local changes in the electrical and chemical potentials as a gate voltage is applied. One could also study...

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Hauptverfasser: Nguyen, Paul V, Teutsch, Natalie C, Wilson, Nathan P, Kahn, Joshua, Xia, Xue, Kandyba, Viktor, Barinov, Alexei, Constantinescu, Gabriel, Hine, Nicholas D. M, Xu, Xiaodong, Cobden, David H, Wilson, Neil R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The ability to directly observe electronic band structure in modern nanoscale field-effect devices could transform understanding of their physics and function. One could, for example, visualize local changes in the electrical and chemical potentials as a gate voltage is applied. One could also study intriguing physical phenomena such as electrically induced topological transitions and many-body spectral reconstructions. Here we show that submicron angle-resolved photoemission (micro-ARPES) applied to two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals heterostructures affords this ability. In graphene devices, we observe a shift of the chemical potential by 0.6 eV across the Dirac point as a gate voltage is applied. In several 2D semiconductors we see the conduction band edge appear as electrons accumulate, establishing its energy and momentum, and observe significant band-gap renormalization at low densities. We also show that micro-ARPES and optical spectroscopy can be applied to a single device, allowing rigorous study of the relationship between gate-controlled electronic and excitonic properties.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1904.07301