| Literature DB >> 26543011 |
E Frantzeskakis1, N De Jong1, B Zwartsenberg1, Y K Huang1, T V Bay1, P Pronk1, E Van Heumen1, D Wu1, Y Pan1, M Radovic2,3, N C Plumb2, N Xu2, M Shi2, A De Visser1, M S Golden1.
Abstract
In an ideal 3D topological insulator (TI), the bulk is insulating and the surface conducting due to the existence of metallic states that are localized on the surface; these are the topological surface states. Quaternary Bi-based compounds of Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te(3-y)Se(y) with finely-tuned bulk stoichiometries are good candidates for realizing ideal 3D TI behavior due to their bulk insulating character. However, despite its insulating bulk in transport experiments, the surface region of Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te(3-y)Se(y) crystals cleaved in ultrahigh vacuum also exhibits occupied states originating from the bulk conduction band. This is due to adsorbate-induced downward band-bending, a phenomenon known from other Bi-based 3D TIs. Here we show, using angle-resolved photoemission, how an EUV light beam of moderate flux can be used to exclude these topologically trivial states from the Fermi level of Bi1.46Sb0.54Te1.7Se1.3 single crystals, thereby re-establishing the purely topological character of the low lying electronic states of the system. We furthermore prove that this process is highly local in nature in this bulk-insulating TI, and are thus able to imprint structures in the spatial energy landscape at the surface. We illustrate this by 'writing' micron-sized letters in the Dirac point energy of the system.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26543011 PMCID: PMC4635360 DOI: 10.1038/srep16309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Tunability of the electronic structure of bulk-insulating Bi1.46Sb0.54Te1.7Se1.3 by adatom adsorption and by exposure to high-flux photons.
(a–c) Near-EF electronic structure on increasing exposure to residual gases in a UHV environment. (d,e) Strong changes occur in the near-EF electronic structure after long exposure to a high-fluence photon beam [flux 3.2 × 1021 photons/(s m2) for 4 hours]. After exposure, the Dirac point has shifted upward to lie very close to EF, as indicated by the red/blue arrows. The sample temperature for all data was 17 K.
Figure 2Demonstration of micro-metric electronic patterning of the electronic states of the topological insulator Bi1.46Sb0.54Te1.7Se1.3 (BSTS1.46).
The three top-left panels represent the spatial dependence of the Dirac point energy (ED) under saturated band bending conditions, before high-fluence photon exposure. The grey-scale shows that the spatial variations in this ED-landscape are negligible. Each pixel corresponds to an I(E, k)-measurement, with examples (white ‘X’ locations) shown in the center-left, black-framed panel. The regions defined by the dashed lines were then exposed to a high-fluence photon beam. After low-fluence ARPES ‘readout’, the new spatial ED-landscape is shown in the top-right panels, indicating that the letters I, o and P (IoP, the acronym for Institute of Physics) have been successfully imprinted into the electronic states of the BSTS1.46 surface. The numbers ‘1’, ‘2’, ‘3’ on the post-writing areas label pixels on the written line, the nearest-neighbor and next-nearest neighbour sites, respectively, and the respective I(E, k) images are shown in the mid-right red-, blue- and green-framed boxes. Comparison of the black- and red-framed I(E, k) images reveals that the writing process has pushed the topologically trivial band-bent states above EF. The neighboring pixels (blue-framed data-box) are only moderately affected, while the 2nd-nearest neighbors (green-framed data-box) show negligible change in ED. These electronic band structures are summarized in a graphical schematic in the appropriate framed box. The lower two panels illustrate the readout of the band-bent starting situation and the situation after reading out the result of the writing process. Pre-exposure and post-exposure pixel images are made using the same grey-scale code (top-left grey-scale bar). The grey-scale pixel images in the upper panels are scaled in units of the beam diameter along the x(y) axes, which was 100(30) μm. The sample temperature was 17 K and the photon flux was greater than 1021 photons/(s m2). The fluence per pixel in the spatial ED maps used for readout was 40× lower than the corresponding fluence used for writing.
Figure 3The lifetime of photon-induced micro-metric patterns.
(left) The imprinted character “P” is reproduced from Fig. 2. The grey-scale encodes the energy shift of ED after exposure to an EUV beam of high photon fluence (see text). (right) Readout of the same area after leaving the sample in the dark for 6.5 hours. The sample temperature was 17 K.