Synthesis and Observation of Emergent Phenomena in Epitaxial Heusler Compound Heterostructures
- Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, CA (United States)
- Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE (United States)
The proposal was on the synthesis and observation of emergent phenomena in epitaxial Heusler compound heterostructures. The large range of properties and number of Heusler compounds opens up a wide number of potential compounds that will exhibit emergent phenomena. The similarity, large range of relatively inexpensive, large area, high crystal quality, III-V bulk substrates, lattice parameters and the ability to tune the lattice parameters through ternary or quaternary III-V compound semiconductor epitaxial growth, makes III-V semiconductors an ideal choice for substrates for epitaxial growth of Heusler compounds. A number of half Heusler compounds have been predicted to exhibit band inversion, making them topological and are therefore expected to exhibit spin-momentum locked topological surface states with linear dispersion. Others are predicted to be semimetals with Weyl points and others semiconducting and magnetic. During the course of this grant, emphasis has been on investigating Heusler compounds with emergent phenomena and demonstrating the ability to tune their properties through alloying and strain. We have grown toplogical semimetal (PtLuSb, PtMnBi), Weyl (Co2MnAl, Co2TiGe), half metal (PtMnSb, Co2MnSi, Co2MnAlxSi1-x, Co2FeAl), and semiconducting (CoTiSb, NiTiSn) and tuned their properties through alloying and epitaxial strain. We also investigated the closely related materials of rare-earth monopnictide, some of which have also been predicted to be topological. During the attempts to grow the PtMnBi, it was discovered that Bi, another predicted topological material when ultrathin, could be grown epitaxially on InSb, results for which are also reported here. The main focus for this effort has been on using variable photon energy and spin-dependent angle resolved photoemission (ARPES) to determine bulk band structure and surface states of pristine epitaxial films grown on III-V semiconductor and MgO substrates and correlate results with theory and transport measurements. Theory has been critical to interpretation of experimental results and has been essential in guiding experiments. The research benefited from several strong collaborations between the PIs and the beamline scientists at the Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) at Stanford and at the Max Lab at Lund University in Sweden. The strong experiment - theory collaboration between the PI’s groups, the Palmstrøm group at UCSB and the Janotti group at the University of Delaware, has been critical for interpreting the experimental ARPES and magnetotransport measurements results and making predictions to guide experiments. Weekly interactive Zoom meetings made this work well. A collaboration between the Palmstrøm group and Dr. Alexei Fedorov at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) resulted in significant modifications to his end chamber to accommodate the vacuum suitcase that was designed and constructed in the Palmstrøm group at UCSB. In collaboration with beamline scientists, Drs. Makoto Hashimoto and Donghui Lu at SLAC, Palmstrøm made modifications to the vacuum suitcase and developed special sample holders that allowed samples to be grown in the Palmstrøm MBE systems at UCSB and transported in the UHV vacuum suitcase to SLAC for ARPES measurements. The development of the vacuum suitcase was essential for this grant as it has allowed variable photon energies to be used to identify surface versus bulk states on samples that could not be capped and decapped using As- or Sb-capping layers.
- Research Organization:
- Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, CA (United States); Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE (United States)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
- Contributing Organization:
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States). Advanced Light Source (ALS); SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
- DOE Contract Number:
- SC0014388
- OSTI ID:
- 1995939
- Report Number(s):
- DOE-UCSB-0014388; TRN: US2404831
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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