I05-ARPES
|
I.
Biało
,
Qisi
Wang
,
J.
Küspert
,
X.
Hong
,
L.
Martinelli
,
O.
Gerguri
,
Y.
Chan
,
K.
Von Arx
,
O. K.
Forslund
,
W. R.
Pudełko
,
C.
Lin
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
Y.
Sassa
,
D.
Betto
,
N. B.
Brookes
,
M.
Rosmus
,
N.
Olszowska
,
Ma. D.
Watson
,
T. K.
Kim
,
C.
Cacho
,
M.
Horio
,
M.
Ishikado
,
H. M.
Rønnow
,
J.
Chang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[32147]
Open Access
Abstract: Strong electron correlations drive Mott insulator transitions. Yet, there exists no framework to classify Mott insulators by their degree of correlation. Cuprate superconductors, with their tunable doping and rich phase diagrams, offer a unique platform to investigate the evolution of these interactions. However, spectroscopic access to a clean half-filled Mott-insulating state is lacking in compounds with the highest superconducting onset temperature. To fill this gap, we introduce a pristine, half-filled thallium-based cuprate system, Tl2Ba5Cu4Ox. Using high-resolution resonant inelastic x-ray scattering, we probe long-lived magnon excitations and uncover a pronounced kink in the magnon dispersion, marked by a simultaneous change in group velocity and lifetime broadening. Modeling the dispersion within a Hubbard-Heisenberg approach, we extract the interaction strength and compare it with other cuprate systems. Our results establish a cuprate universal relation between electron-electron interaction and magnon zone-boundary dispersion. Superconductivity seems to be optimal at intermediate correlation strength, suggesting an optimal balance between localization and itinerancy.
|
Dec 2025
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
Y.
Alexanian
,
A.
De La Torre
,
S.
Mckeown Walker
,
M.
Straub
,
G.
Gatti
,
A.
Hunter
,
S.
Mandloi
,
E.
Cappelli
,
S.
Riccò
,
F. Y.
Bruno
,
M.
Radovic
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
M.
Shi
,
J.
Osiecki
,
C.
Polley
,
T. K.
Kim
,
P.
Dudin
,
M.
Hoesch
,
R. S.
Perry
,
A.
Tamai
,
F.
Baumberger
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[10348, 12404, 17381]
Open Access
Abstract: The fate of the Fermi surface in bulk electron-doped Sr2IrO4 remains elusive, as does the origin and extension of its pseudogap phase. Here, we use high-resolution angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES) to investigate the electronic structure of Sr2−xLaxIrO4 up to x = 0.2, a factor of two higher than in previous work. We find that the antinodal pseudogap persists up to the highest doping level, and thus beyond the sharp increase in Hall carrier density to ≃ 1 + x recently observed above x* ≃ 0.161. This suggests that doped iridates host a unique phase of matter in which a large Hall density coexists with an anisotropic pseudogap, breaking up the Fermi surface into disconnected arcs. The temperature boundary of the pseudogap is T* ≃ 200 K for x = 0.2, comparable to cuprates and to the energy scale of short range antiferromagnetic correlations in cuprates and iridates.
|
Oct 2025
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
Mihir
Date
,
Francesco
Petocchi
,
Yun
Yen
,
Jonas A.
Krieger
,
Banabir
Pal
,
Vicky
Hasse
,
Emily C.
Mcfarlane
,
Chris
Körner
,
Jiho
Yoon
,
Matthew D.
Watson
,
Vladimir N.
Strocov
,
Yuanfeng
Xu
,
Ilya
Kostanovski
,
Mazhar N.
Ali
,
Sailong
Ju
,
Nicholas C.
Plumb
,
Michael A.
Sentef
,
Georg
Woltersdorf
,
Michael
Schüler
,
Philipp
Werner
,
Claudia
Felser
,
Stuart S. P.
Parkin
,
Niels B. M.
Schröter
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[29240]
Open Access
Abstract: Crystalline solids can become band insulators due to fully filled bands, or Mott insulators due to strong electronic correlations. While Mott insulators can theoretically occur in systems with an even number of electrons per unit cell, distinguishing them from band insulators experimentally has remained a longstanding challenge. In this work, we present a unique momentum-resolved signature of a dimerized Mott-insulating phase in the experimental spectral function of Nb3Br8: the top of the highest occupied band along the out-of-plane direction kz has a momentum-space separation Δkz = 2π/d, whereas that of a band insulator is less than π/d, where d is the average interlayer spacing. Identifying Nb3Br8 as a Mott insulator is crucial to understand its role in the field-free Josephson diode effect. Moreover, our method could be extended to other van der Waals systems where tuning interlayer coupling and Coulomb interactions can drive a band- to Mott-insulating transition.
|
Apr 2025
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
A.
Hunter
,
S.
Beck
,
E.
Cappelli
,
F.
Margot
,
M.
Straub
,
Y.
Alexanian
,
G.
Gatti
,
M. D.
Watson
,
T. K.
Kim
,
C.
Cacho
,
N. cc.
Plumb
,
M.
Shi
,
M.
Radović
,
D. A.
Sokolov
,
A. p.
Mackenzie
,
M.
Zingl
,
J.
Mravlje
,
A.
Georges
,
F.
Baumberger
,
A.
Tamai
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[25083]
Abstract: We study the temperature evolution of quasiparticles in the correlated metal
Sr
2
RuO
4
. Our angle resolved photoemission data show that quasiparticles persist up to temperatures above 200 K, far beyond the Fermi liquid regime. Extracting the quasiparticle self-energy, we demonstrate that the quasiparticle residue
Z
increases with increasing temperature. Quasiparticles eventually disappear on approaching the bad metal state of
Sr
2
RuO
4
not by losing weight but via excessive broadening from super-Planckian scattering. We further show that the Fermi surface of
Sr
2
RuO
4
—defined as the loci where the spectral function peaks—deflates with increasing temperature. These findings are in semiquantitative agreement with dynamical mean field theory calculations.
|
Dec 2023
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
J.
Küspert
,
R.
Cohn Wagner
,
C.
Lin
,
K.
Von Arx
,
Q.
Wang
,
K.
Kramer
,
W. R.
Pudelko
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
C. E.
Matt
,
C. G.
Fatuzzo
,
D.
Sutter
,
Y.
Sassa
,
J.-Q.
Yan
,
J.-S.
Zhou
,
J. B.
Goodenough
,
S.
Pyon
,
T.
Takayama
,
H.
Takagi
,
T.
Kurosawa
,
N.
Momono
,
M.
Oda
,
M.
Hoesch
,
C.
Cacho
,
T. K.
Kim
,
M.
Horio
,
J.
Chang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[27768, 10550]
Open Access
Abstract: We carried out a comprehensive high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study of the pseudogap interplay with superconductivity in La-based cuprates. The three systems
La
2
−
x
Sr
x
CuO
4
,
La
1.6
−
x
Nd
0.4
Sr
x
CuO
4
, and
La
1.8
−
x
Eu
0.2
Sr
x
CuO
4
display slightly different pseudogap critical points in the temperature versus doping phase diagram. We studied the pseudogap evolution into the superconducting state for doping concentrations just below the critical point. In this setting, near optimal doping for superconductivity and in the presence of the weakest possible pseudogap, we uncover how the pseudogap is partially suppressed inside the superconducting state. This conclusion is based on the direct observation of a reduced pseudogap energy scale and re-emergence of spectral weight suppressed by the pseudogap. Altogether these observations suggest that the pseudogap phenomenon in La-based cuprates is in competition with superconductivity for antinodal spectral weight.
|
Oct 2022
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
C. E.
Matt
,
O.
Ivashko
,
M.
Horio
,
J.
Choi
,
Q.
Wang
,
D.
Sutter
,
N.
Dennler
,
M. H.
Fischer
,
S.
Katrych
,
L.
Forro
,
J.
Ma
,
B.
Fu
,
B. Q.
Lv
,
M. V.
Zimmermann
,
T. K.
Kim
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
N.
Xu
,
M.
Shi
,
Johan
Chang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[16104]
Open Access
Abstract: The interplay between structural and electronic phases in iron-based superconductors is a central theme in the search for the superconducting pairing mechanism. While electronic nematicity is competing with superconductivity, the effect of purely structural orthorhombic order is unexplored. Here, using x-ray diffraction and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we reveal a structural orthorhombic phase in the electron-doped iron-pnictide superconductor
Pr
4
Fe
2
As
2
Te
0.88
O
4
(
T
c
=
25
K), which is distinct from orthorhombicity in the nematic phase in underdoped pnictides. Despite the high electron doping we find an exceptionally high orthorhombic onset temperature (
T
ort
∼
250
K), no signatures of phase competition with superconductivity, and absence of electronic nematic order as the driving mechanism for orthorhombicity. Combined, our results establish a high-temperature phase in the phase diagram of iron-pnictide superconductors and impose strong constraints for the modeling of their superconducting pairing mechanism.
|
Jun 2021
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
M.
Horio
,
Q.
Wang
,
V.
Granata
,
K. P.
Kramer
,
Y.
Sassa
,
S.
Jöhr
,
D.
Sutter
,
A.
Bold
,
L.
Das
,
Y.
Xu
,
R.
Frison
,
R.
Fittipaldi
,
T. K.
Kim
,
C.
Cacho
,
J. E.
Rault
,
P. Le
Fèvre
,
F.
Bertran
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
M.
Shi
,
A.
Vecchione
,
M. H.
Fischer
,
J.
Chang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[20259]
Open Access
Abstract: Electronic band structures in solids stem from a periodic potential reflecting the structure of either the crystal lattice or electronic order. In the stoichiometric ruthenate Ca3Ru2O7, numerous Fermi surface-sensitive probes indicate a low-temperature electronic reconstruction. Yet, the causality and the reconstructed band structure remain unsolved. Here, we show by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, how in Ca3Ru2O7 a C2-symmetric massive Dirac semimetal is realized through a Brillouin-zone preserving electronic reconstruction. This Dirac semimetal emerges in a two-stage transition upon cooling. The Dirac point and band velocities are consistent with constraints set by quantum oscillation, thermodynamic, and transport experiments, suggesting that the complete Fermi surface is resolved. The reconstructed structure—incompatible with translational-symmetry-breaking density waves—serves as an important test for band structure calculations of correlated electron systems.
|
Mar 2021
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
D.
Sutter
,
M.
Kim
,
C. E.
Matt
,
M.
Horio
,
R.
Fittipaldi
,
A.
Vecchione
,
V.
Granata
,
K.
Hauser
,
Y.
Sassa
,
G.
Gatti
,
M.
Grioni
,
M.
Hoesch
,
T. K.
Kim
,
E.
Rienks
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
M.
Shi
,
T.
Neupert
,
A.
Georges
,
J.
Chang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[15296]
Abstract: We present a comprehensive angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy study of
Ca
1.8
Sr
0.2
RuO
4
. Four distinct bands are revealed and along the Ru-O bond direction their orbital characters are identified through a light polarization analysis and comparison to dynamical mean-field theory calculations. Bands assigned to
d
x
z
,
d
y
z
orbitals display Fermi liquid behavior with fourfold quasiparticle mass renormalization. Extremely heavy fermions—associated with a predominantly
d
x
y
band character—are shown to display non-Fermi-liquid behavior. We thus demonstrate that
Ca
1.8
Sr
0.2
RuO
4
is a hybrid metal with an orbitally selective Fermi liquid quasiparticle breakdown.
|
Mar 2019
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
Open Access
Abstract: Recent debates in the literature over the relationship between topology and Extreme Magnetoresistance (XMR) have drawn attention to the Lanthanum Monopnictide family of binary compounds. Angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is used to measure the electronic structure of the XMR topological semimetal candidates LaBi, LaSb, and LaAs. The orbital content of the near-E F states in LaBi and LaSb are extracted using varying photon polarizations and both dominant d and p bands are observed near X. The measured bulk bands are shifted in energy when compared to the results of Density Functional Calculations. This disagreement is minor in LaBi, but large in LaSb and LaAs. The measured bulk band structure of LaBi shows a clear band inversion and puts LaBi in the υ = 1 class of Topological Insulators (or semimetals), as predicted by calculations and consistent with the measured Dirac-like surface states. LaSb is on the verge of a band inversion with a less-clear case for any distinctly topological surface states and in disagreement with calculations. Lastly, these same bands in LaAs are clearly non-inverted implying its topological triviality and demonstrating a topological phase transition in the Lanthanum monopnictides. Using a wide range of photon energies the true bulk states are cleanly disentangled from the various types of surface states which are present. These surface states exist due to surface projections of bulk states in LaSb and for topological reasons in LaBi.
|
May 2018
|
|
I05-ARPES
|
D.
Sutter
,
C. G.
Fatuzzo
,
S.
Moser
,
M.
Kim
,
R.
Fittipaldi
,
A.
Vecchione
,
V.
Granata
,
Y.
Sassa
,
F.
Cossalter
,
G.
Gatti
,
M.
Grioni
,
H. M.
Rønnow
,
N. C.
Plumb
,
C. E.
Matt
,
M.
Shi
,
M.
Hoesch
,
T. K.
Kim
,
T.-R.
Chang
,
H.-T.
Jeng
,
C.
Jozwiak
,
A.
Bostwick
,
E.
Rotenberg
,
A.
Georges
,
T.
Neupert
,
J.
Chang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[14617, 12926]
Open Access
Abstract: A paradigmatic case of multi-band Mott physics including spin-orbit and Hund’s coupling is realized in Ca2RuO4. Progress in understanding the nature of this Mott insulating phase has been impeded by the lack of knowledge about the low-energy electronic structure. Here we provide—using angle-resolved photoemission electron spectroscopy—the band structure of the paramagnetic insulating phase of Ca2RuO4 and show how it features several distinct energy scales. Comparison to a simple analysis of atomic multiplets provides a quantitative estimate of the Hund’s coupling J=0.4 eV. Furthermore, the experimental spectra are in good agreement with electronic structure calculations performed with Dynamical Mean-Field Theory. The crystal field stabilization of the dxy orbital due to c-axis contraction is shown to be essential to explain the insulating phase. These results underscore the importance of multi-band physics, Coulomb interaction and Hund’s coupling that together generate the Mott insulating state of Ca2RuO4.
|
May 2017
|
|