| Literature DB >> 25793848 |
C Cacho1, A Crepaldi2, M Battiato3, J Braun4, F Cilento2, M Zacchigna5, M C Richter6,7, O Heckmann6,7, E Springate1, Y Liu8, S S Dhesi8, H Berger9, Ph Bugnon9, K Held3, M Grioni9, H Ebert4, K Hricovini6,7, J Minár4,10, F Parmigiani2,11,12.
Abstract
The prospect of optically inducing and controlling a spin-polarized current in spintronic devices has generated wide interest in the out-of-equilibrium electronic and spin structure of topological insulators. In this Letter we show that only measuring the spin intensity signal over several orders of magnitude by spin-, time-, and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy can provide a comprehensive description of the optically excited electronic states in Bi_{2}Se_{3}. Our experiments reveal the existence of a surface resonance state in the second bulk band gap that is benchmarked by fully relativistic ab initio spin-resolved photoemission calculations. We propose that the newly reported state plays a major role in the ultrafast dynamics of the system, acting as a bottleneck for the interaction between the topologically protected surface state and the bulk conduction band. In fact, the spin-polarization dynamics in momentum space show that these states display macroscopically different temperatures and, more importantly, different cooling rates over several picoseconds.Year: 2015 PMID: 25793848 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.097401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161