Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy

<p>Nodal semimetals host either degenerate points (Dirac/Weyl points) or lines whose band topology in Brillouin zone can be classified either as trivial (normal nodal semimetals) or non trivial (topological nodal semimetals). This thesis investigates the electronic structure of two different c...

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Main Author: Ekahana, S
Other Authors: Chen, Y
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
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author Ekahana, S
author2 Chen, Y
author_facet Chen, Y
Ekahana, S
author_sort Ekahana, S
collection OXFORD
description <p>Nodal semimetals host either degenerate points (Dirac/Weyl points) or lines whose band topology in Brillouin zone can be classified either as trivial (normal nodal semimetals) or non trivial (topological nodal semimetals). This thesis investigates the electronic structure of two different categories of topological nodal semimetals probed by angleresolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES):</p> <p>The first material is Indium Bismuth (InBi). InBi is a semimetal with simple tetragonal structure with P4/nmm space group. This space group is predicted to host protected nodal lines along the perpendicular momentum direction at the high symmetry lines of the Brillouin zone boundary even under strong spin-orbit coupling (SOC) situation. As a semimetal with two heavy elements, InBi is a suitable candidate to test the prediction. The investigation by ARPES demonstrates not only that InBi hosts the nodal line in the presence of strong SOC, it also shows the signature of type-II Dirac crossing along the perpendicular momentum direction from the center of Brillouin zone. However, as the nodal line observed is trivial in nature, there is no exotic drumhead surface states observed in this material. This finding demonstrates that Dirac crossings can be protected in a non-symmorphic space group.</p> <p>The second material is NbIrTe<sub>4</sub> which is a semimetal that breaks inversion symmetry predicted to host only four Weyl points. This simplest configuration is confirmed by the measurement from the top and bottom surface of NbIrTe<sub>4</sub> showing only a pair of Fermi arcs each. Furthermore, it is found that the Fermi arc connectivity on the bottom surface experiences re-wiring as it evolves from Weyl points energy to the ARPES Fermi energy level. This change is attributed to the hybridisation between the surface and the bulk states as their projection lie within the vicinity of each other. The finding in this work demonstrates that although Fermi arcs are guaranteed in Weyl semimetals, their shape and connectivity are not protected and may be altered accordingly</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:afed6156-7aa2-4ba9-afd1-af53d775494f2022-03-27T03:52:46ZInvestigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopyThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:afed6156-7aa2-4ba9-afd1-af53d775494fTopologyEnglishORA Deposit2018Ekahana, SChen, Y<p>Nodal semimetals host either degenerate points (Dirac/Weyl points) or lines whose band topology in Brillouin zone can be classified either as trivial (normal nodal semimetals) or non trivial (topological nodal semimetals). This thesis investigates the electronic structure of two different categories of topological nodal semimetals probed by angleresolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES):</p> <p>The first material is Indium Bismuth (InBi). InBi is a semimetal with simple tetragonal structure with P4/nmm space group. This space group is predicted to host protected nodal lines along the perpendicular momentum direction at the high symmetry lines of the Brillouin zone boundary even under strong spin-orbit coupling (SOC) situation. As a semimetal with two heavy elements, InBi is a suitable candidate to test the prediction. The investigation by ARPES demonstrates not only that InBi hosts the nodal line in the presence of strong SOC, it also shows the signature of type-II Dirac crossing along the perpendicular momentum direction from the center of Brillouin zone. However, as the nodal line observed is trivial in nature, there is no exotic drumhead surface states observed in this material. This finding demonstrates that Dirac crossings can be protected in a non-symmorphic space group.</p> <p>The second material is NbIrTe<sub>4</sub> which is a semimetal that breaks inversion symmetry predicted to host only four Weyl points. This simplest configuration is confirmed by the measurement from the top and bottom surface of NbIrTe<sub>4</sub> showing only a pair of Fermi arcs each. Furthermore, it is found that the Fermi arc connectivity on the bottom surface experiences re-wiring as it evolves from Weyl points energy to the ARPES Fermi energy level. This change is attributed to the hybridisation between the surface and the bulk states as their projection lie within the vicinity of each other. The finding in this work demonstrates that although Fermi arcs are guaranteed in Weyl semimetals, their shape and connectivity are not protected and may be altered accordingly</p>
spellingShingle Topology
Ekahana, S
Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
title Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
title_full Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
title_fullStr Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
title_short Investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
title_sort investigation of topological nodal semimetals through angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy
topic Topology
work_keys_str_mv AT ekahanas investigationoftopologicalnodalsemimetalsthroughangleresolvedphotoemissionspectroscopy