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91探花
A VUV sub-micron hotspot for photoemission spectroscopy

Vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) lasers have exhibited great potential as the light source for various spectroscopies, which, if they can be focused into a smaller beam spot, will not only allow investigation of mesoscopic materials but also find applications in manufacture of nano-objects with excellent precision. Towards this goal, scientists in China invented a 177 nm VUV laser system that can achieve a record-small (<1 渭m) focal spot at a long focal length (~45 mm). This system can be re-equipped for usage in low-cost ARPES and might benefit quantum materials, condensed matter physics and nanophotonics.

Prof Yulin Chen

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Quantum materials

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Electronic structures and photoemission spectroscopy
yulin.chen@physics.ox.ac.uk
Clarendon Laboratory, room RM263, Mullard Bldg.
  • About
  • Publications

Bulk Fermi surface coexistence with Dirac surface state in Bi_{2}Se_{3}: A comparison of photoemission and Shubnikov鈥揹e Haas measurements

PRB American Physical Society 81:20 (2010) 205407

Authors:

JG Analytis, J Chu, Y Chen, F Corredor, RD McDonald, ZX Shen, IR Fisher

Aharonov-Bohm interference in topological insulator nanoribbons

Nat Mater Nature Publishing Group 9:3 (2010) 225-229

Authors:

H Peng, K Lai, D Kong, S Meister, Y Chen, X Qi, S Zhang, Z Shen, Y Cui

Topological insulator nanowires and nanoribbons.

Nano Lett 10:1 (2010) 329-333

Authors:

Desheng Kong, Jason C Randel, Hailin Peng, Judy J Cha, Stefan Meister, Keji Lai, Yulin Chen, Zhi-Xun Shen, Hari C Manoharan, Yi Cui

Abstract:

Recent theoretical calculations and photoemission spectroscopy measurements on the bulk Bi(2)Se(3) material show that it is a three-dimensional topological insulator possessing conductive surface states with nondegenerate spins, attractive for dissipationless electronics and spintronics applications. Nanoscale topological insulator materials have a large surface-to-volume ratio that can manifest the conductive surface states and are promising candidates for devices. Here we report the synthesis and characterization of high quality single crystalline Bi(2)Se(3) nanomaterials with a variety of morphologies. The synthesis of Bi(2)Se(3) nanowires and nanoribbons employs Au-catalyzed vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) mechanism. Nanowires, which exhibit rough surfaces, are formed by stacking nanoplatelets along the axial direction of the wires. Nanoribbons are grown along [1120] direction with a rectangular cross-section and have diverse morphologies, including quasi-one-dimensional, sheetlike, zigzag and sawtooth shapes. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) studies on nanoribbons show atomically smooth surfaces with approximately 1 nm step edges, indicating single Se-Bi-Se-Bi-Se quintuple layers. STM measurements reveal a honeycomb atomic lattice, suggesting that the STM tip couples not only to the top Se atomic layer, but also to the Bi atomic layer underneath, which opens up the possibility to investigate the contribution of different atomic orbitals to the topological surface states. Transport measurements of a single nanoribbon device (four terminal resistance and Hall resistance) show great promise for nanoribbons as candidates to study topological surface states.

Massive Dirac Fermion on the Surface of a Magnetically Doped Topological Insulator

SCIENCE 329:5992 (2010) 659-662

Authors:

YL Chen, J-H Chu, JG Analytis, ZK Liu, K Igarashi, H-H Kuo, XL Qi, SK Mo, RG Moore, DH Lu, M Hashimoto, T Sasagawa, SC Zhang, IR Fisher, Z Hussain, ZX Shen

Material and Doping Dependence of the Nodal and Antinodal Dispersion Renormalizations in Single- and Multilayer Cuprates

ADVANCES IN CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS 2010 (2010) ARTN 968304

Authors:

S Johnston, WS Lee, Y Chen, EA Nowadnick, B Moritz, Z-X Shen, TP Devereaux

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