Alberto Ubaldini
University of Geneva
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Featured researches published by Alberto Ubaldini.
Nature Communications | 2011
Benjamin Sacépé; Jeroen B. Oostinga; Jian Li; Alberto Ubaldini; Nuno Jose Guimaraes Couto; Enrico Giannini; Alberto F. Morpurgo
Three-dimensional topological insulators are characterized by the presence of a bandgap in their bulk and gapless Dirac fermions at their surfaces. New physical phenomena originating from the presence of the Dirac fermions are predicted to occur, and to be experimentally accessible via transport measurements in suitably designed electronic devices. Here we study transport through superconducting junctions fabricated on thin Bi2Se3 single crystals, equipped with a gate electrode. In the presence of perpendicular magnetic field B, sweeping the gate voltage enables us to observe the filling of the Dirac fermion Landau levels, whose character evolves continuously from electron- to hole-like. When B=0, a supercurrent appears, whose magnitude can be gate tuned, and is minimum at the charge neutrality point determined from the Landau level filling. Our results demonstrate how gated nano-electronic devices give control over normal and superconducting transport of Dirac fermions at an individual surface of a three-dimensional topological insulators.
Nano Letters | 2015
Ignacio Gutiérrez Lezama; Ashish Arora; Alberto Ubaldini; Céline Barreteau; Enrico Giannini; M. Potemski; Alberto F. Morpurgo
We study the evolution of the band gap structure in few-layer MoTe2 crystals, by means of low-temperature microreflectance (MR) and temperature-dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements. The analysis of the measurements indicate that in complete analogy with other semiconducting transition metal dichalchogenides (TMDs) the dominant PL emission peaks originate from direct transitions associated with recombination of excitons and trions. When we follow the evolution of the PL intensity as a function of layer thickness, however, we observe that MoTe2 behaves differently from other semiconducting TMDs investigated earlier. Specifically, the exciton PL yield (integrated PL intensity) is identical for mono and bilayer, decreases slightly for trilayer, and it is significantly lower in the tetralayer. The analysis of this behavior and of all our experimental observations is fully consistent with mono and bilayer MoTe2 being direct band gap semiconductors with tetralayer MoTe2 being an indirect gap semiconductor and with trilayers having nearly identical direct and indirect gaps. This conclusion is different from the one reached for other recently investigated semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides for which monolayers are found to be direct band gap semiconductors, and thicker layers have indirect band gaps that are significantly smaller (by hundreds of meV) than the direct gap. We discuss the relevance of our findings for experiments of fundamental interest and possible future device applications.
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2014
Ignacio Gutiérrez Lezama; Alberto Ubaldini; Maria Longobardi; Enrico Giannini; Christoph Renner; A. B. Kuzmenko; Alberto F. Morpurgo
Semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have emerged as materials that can be used to realize two-dimensional (2D) crystals possessing rather unique transport and optical properties. Most research has so far focused on sulfur and selenium compounds, while tellurium-based materials have attracted little attention so far. As a first step in the investigation of Te-based semiconducting TMDs in this context, we have studied MoTe2 crystals with thicknesses above 4 nm, focusing on surface transport and a quantitative determination of the gap structure. Using ionic-liquid gated transistors, we show that ambipolar transport at the surface of the material is reproducibly achieved, with hole and electron mobility values between 10 and 30 cm2 V−1s−1 at room temperature. The gap structure is determined through three different techniques: ionic-liquid gated transistors and scanning tunneling spectroscopy, which allow the measurement of the indirect gap (Eind), and optical transmission spectroscopy on crystals of different thickness, which enables the determination of both the direct (Edir) and the indirect gap. We find that at room temperature Eind = 0.88 eV and Edir = 1.02 eV. Our results suggest that thin MoTe2 layers may exhibit a transition to a direct gap before mono-layer thickness. They should also drastically extend the range of direct gaps accessible in 2D semiconducting TMDs.
Physical Review B | 2012
Ana Akrap; C. C. Homes; M. K. Tran; Alberto Ubaldini; J. Teyssier; Enrico Giannini; D. van der Marel; Philippe Lerch
The temperature dependence of the complex optical properties of the three-dimensional topological insulator Bi2Te2Se is reported for light polarized in the a-b planes at ambient pressure, as well as the effects of pressure at room temperature. This material displays a semiconducting character with a bulk optical gap of 300 meV at 295 K. In addition to the two expected infrared-active vibrations observed in the planes, there is additional fine structure that is attributed to either the removal of degeneracy or the activation of Raman modes due to disorder. A strong impurity band located at 200 cm^{-1} is also observed. At and just above the optical gap, several interband absorptions are found to show a strong temperature and pressure dependence. As the temperature is lowered these features increase in strength and harden. The application of pressure leads to a very abrupt closing of the gap above 8 GPa, and strongly modifies the interband absorptions in the mid-infrared spectral range. While ab initio calculations fail to predict the collapse of the gap, they do successfully describe the size of the band gap at ambient pressure, and the magnitude and shape of the optical conductivity.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Baptiste Hildebrand; Clément Didiot; Anna Maria Novello; Gaël Monney; Alessandro Scarfato; Alberto Ubaldini; Helmuth Berger; David R. Bowler; Christoph Renner; Philipp Aebi
The transition-metal dichalcogenide 1T-TiSe2 is a quasi-two-dimensional layered material with a charge density wave (CDW) transition temperature of T(CDW) ≈ 200 K. Self-doping effects for crystals grown at different temperatures introduce structural defects, modify the temperature-dependent resistivity, and strongly perturbate the CDW phase. Here, we study the structural and doping nature of such native defects combining scanning tunneling microscopy or spectroscopy and ab initio calculations. The dominant native single atom dopants we identify in our single crystals are intercalated Ti atoms, Se vacancies, and Se substitutions by residual iodine and oxygen.
EPL | 2014
Ana Akrap; Alberto Ubaldini; Enrico Giannini; László Forró
We study the detailed temperature and composition dependence of the resistivity, , and thermopower, S(T), for a series of layered bismuth chalcogenides Bi2Te3−xSex, and report the stoichiometry dependence of the optical band gap. In the resistivity of the most compensated member, Bi2Te2.1Se0.9, we find a low-temperature plateau whose onset temperature correlates with the high-temperature activation energy. For the whole series S(T) can be described by a simple model for an extrinsic semiconductor. By substituting Se for Te, the Fermi level is tuned from the valence band into the conduction band. The maximum values of S(T), bulk band gap as well the activation energy in the resistivity are found for .
Physical Review B | 2015
Anna Maria Novello; Baptiste Hildebrand; Alessandro Scarfato; Clément Didiot; Gaël Monney; Alberto Ubaldini; Helmuth Berger; David R. Bowler; Philipp Aebi; Christoph Renner
We present a detailed low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) study of the commensurate charge density wave (CDW) in 1T-TiSe2 in the presence of single atom defects. We find no significant modification of the CDW lattice in single crystals with native defect concentrations where some bulk probes already measure substantial reductions in the CDW phase transition signature. A systematic analysis of STM micrographs combined with density functional theory modeling of atomic defect patterns indicate that the observed CDW modulation lies in the Se surface layer. The defect patterns clearly show there are no 2H-polytype inclusions in the CDW phase, as previously found at room temperature [A. N. Titov et al., Phys. Solid State 53, 1073 (2011)]. They further provide an alternative explanation for the chiral Friedel oscillations recently reported in this compound [J. Ishioka et al., Phys. Rev. B 84, 245125 (2011)].
Physical Review B | 2016
Baptiste Hildebrand; Thomas Jaouen; Clément Didiot; Elia Razzoli; Gaël Monney; Marie-Laure Mottas; Alberto Ubaldini; Helmuth Berger; C. Barreteau; H. Beck; David R. Bowler; Philipp Aebi
The impact of variable Ti self-doping on the 1T−TiSe2 charge density wave (CDW) is studied by scanning tunneling microscopy. Supported by density functional theory, we show that agglomeration of intercalated-Ti atoms acts as preferential nucleation centers for the CDW that breaks up in phase-shifted CDW domains whose size directly depends on the intercalated-Ti concentration and which are separated by atomically sharp phase boundaries. The close relationship between the diminution of the CDW domain size and the disappearance of the anomalous peak in the temperature-dependent resistivity allows to draw a coherent picture of the 1T−TiSe2 CDW phase transition and its relation to excitons.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Anna Maria Novello; Marcello Spera; Alessandro Scarfato; Alberto Ubaldini; Enrico Giannini; D. R. Bowler; Christoph Renner
We study the impact of Cu intercalation on the charge density wave (CDW) in 1T-Cu_{x}TiSe_{2} by scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy. Cu atoms, identified through density functional theory modeling, are found to intercalate randomly on the octahedral site in the van der Waals gap and to dope delocalized electrons near the Fermi level. While the CDW modulation period does not depend on Cu content, we observe the formation of charge stripe domains at low Cu content (x<0.02) and a breaking up of the commensurate order into 2×2 domains at higher Cu content. The latter shrink with increasing Cu concentration and tend to be phase shifted. These findings invalidate a proposed excitonic pairing as the primary CDW formation mechanism in this material.
Physical Review B | 2017
Baptiste Hildebrand; Thomas Jaouen; Clément Didiot; Elia Razzoli; Gaël Monney; Marie-Laure Mottas; Fabiano Vanini; C. Barreteau; Alberto Ubaldini; Enrico Giannini; Helmuth Berger; D. R. Bowler; Philipp Aebi
In Ti-intercalated self-doped 1T-TiSe2 crystals, the charge density wave (CDW) superstructure induces two nonequivalent sites for Ti dopants. Recently, it has been shown that increasing Ti doping dramatically influences the CDW by breaking it into phase-shifted domains. Here, we report scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy experiments that reveal a dopant-site dependence of the CDW gap. Supported by density functional theory, we demonstrate that the loss of the long-range phase coherence introduces an imbalance in the intercalated-Ti site distribution and restrains the CDW gap closure. This local resilient behavior of the 1T-TiSe2 CDW reveals an entangled mechanism between CDW, periodic lattice distortion, and induced nonequivalent defects.