Many-Body Interactions and Spin-Splitting of the Electronic Structure in WSe2 and EuO
Abstract
The ability to create and control spin-polarised electronic states in solids is vital for realising all-electrical manipulation of spins for the next generation of electronic
devices. Such devices are likely to rely upon the injection of a spin-current
into a semiconducting material whereupon the current is manipulated for the
transfer of data. Two such materials that have been proposed for spin injection
and manipulation are EuO, a ferromagnetic semiconductor, and WSe2, a member
of the layered transition metal dichalcogenides, respectively. By directly probing
the electronic band structure using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy,
ARPES, and its spin-resolved analogue, SARPES, a "hidden" spin-polarisaion is
observed in bulk WSe2 due to the local breaking of inversion symmetry that locks
the spin to the valley- and layer-pseudospins. By chemical gating, the layerdegeneracy is broken which induces a spin-splitting of the valence bands and
the formation of a 2DEG. Increasing the carrier density of the 2DEG is shown to
result in a lowering of the chemical potential, providing direct spectroscopic evidence for many body effects due to electron-electron interactions. Whereas WSe2
hosts spin-polarised states due to local inversion-symmetry breaking, ferromagnetism
induces spin-polarised valence and conduction band states in Gd-doped
EuO that break time-reversal symmetry. Using ARPES, the full 3D dispersion
of the conduction bands is observed for the first time and the temperature dependence
of the spin-split conduction band is analysed. By varying the Gd concentration,
the carrier density is varied, revealing two kinds of satellite features
due to electron-phonon and electron-plasmon interactions in the low temperature
phase. Thus, despite differences in dimensionality, structure and symmetries,
both materials show evidence of electron interactions which are directly
measurable by ARPES and are seen to host spin-split electronic states that can be
manipulated via external conditions.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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