| Literature DB >> 27936794 |
William S Whitney1, Victor W Brar2,3, Yunbo Ou4, Yinming Shao5,6, Artur R Davoyan2, D N Basov5,6, Ke He7, Qi-Kun Xue7, Harry A Atwater2.
Abstract
We report mid-infrared spectroscopy measurements of ultrathin, electrostatically gated (Bi1-xSbx)2Te3 topological insulator films in which we observe several percent modulation of transmittance and reflectance as gating shifts the Fermi level. Infrared transmittance measurements of gated films were enabled by use of an epitaxial lift-off method for large-area transfer of topological insulator films from infrared-absorbing SrTiO3 growth substrates to thermal oxidized silicon substrates. We combine these optical experiments with transport measurements and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to identify the observed spectral modulation as a gate-driven transfer of spectral weight between both bulk and 2D topological surface channels and interband and intraband channels. We develop a model for the complex permittivity of gated (Bi1-xSbx)2Te3 and find a good match to our experimental data. These results open the path for layered topological insulator materials as a new candidate for tunable, ultrathin infrared optics and highlight the possibility of switching topological optoelectronic phenomena between bulk and spin-polarized surface regimes.Entities:
Keywords: Bismuth antimony telluride; Burstein−Moss shift; mid-infrared; optical modulator; topological insulator; tunable optical properties
Year: 2016 PMID: 27936794 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b03992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189