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Dive into the research topics where J. Sánchez-Barriga is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Sánchez-Barriga.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Tolerance of topological surface states towards magnetic moments: Fe on Bi2Se3.

M. R. Scholz; J. Sánchez-Barriga; D. Marchenko; A. Varykhalov; A. A. Volykhov; L. V. Yashina; O. Rader

We study the effect of Fe impurities deposited on the surface of the topological insulator Bi(2)Se(3) by means of core-level and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy. The topological surface state reveals surface electron doping when the Fe is deposited at room temperature and hole doping with increased linearity when deposited at low temperature (~8 K). We show that in both cases the surface state remains intact and gapless, in contradiction to current belief. Our results suggest that the surface state can very well exist at functional interfaces with ferromagnets in future devices.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Ir(111) surface state with giant Rashba splitting persists under graphene in air.

A. Varykhalov; D. Marchenko; M. R. Scholz; E. D. L. Rienks; T. K. Kim; Gustav Bihlmayer; J. Sánchez-Barriga; O. Rader

Spin currents which allow for a dissipationless transport of information can be generated by electric fields in semiconductor heterostructures in the presence of a Rashbatype spin-orbit coupling. The largest Rashba effects occur for electronic surface states of metals but these cannot exist but under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. Here, we reveal a giant Rashba effect (αR ≈ 1.5 · 10 −10 eVm) on a surface state of Ir(111). We demonstrate that its spin splitting and spin polarization remain unaffected when Ir is covered with graphene. The graphene protection is, in turn, sufficient for the spinsplit surface state to survive in ambient atmosphere. We discuss this result along with evidences for a topological protection of the surface state.


ACS Nano | 2013

Negligible Surface Reactivity of Topological Insulators Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3 towards Oxygen and Water

L. V. Yashina; J. Sánchez-Barriga; M. R. Scholz; A. A. Volykhov; Anna P. Sirotina; Vera S. Neudachina; Marina E. Tamm; A. Varykhalov; D. Marchenko; G. Springholz; G. Bauer; Axel Knop-Gericke; O. Rader

The long-term stability of functional properties of topological insulator materials is crucial for the operation of future topological insulator based devices. Water and oxygen have been reported to be the main sources of surface deterioration by chemical reactions. In the present work, we investigate the behavior of the topological surface states on Bi2X3 (X = Se, Te) by valence-band and core level photoemission in a wide range of water and oxygen pressures both in situ (from 10(-8) to 0.1 mbar) and ex situ (at 1 bar). We find that no chemical reactions occur in pure oxygen and in pure water. Water itself does not chemically react with both Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3 surfaces and only leads to slight p-doping. In dry air, the oxidation of the Bi2Te3 surface occurs on the time scale of months, in the case of Bi2Se3 surface of cleaved crystal, not even on the time scale of years. The presence of water, however, promotes the oxidation in air, and we suggest the underlying reactions supported by density functional calculations. All in all, the surface reactivity is found to be negligible, which allows expanding the acceptable ranges of conditions for preparation, handling and operation of future Bi2X3-based devices.


Nature Communications | 2014

Observation of quantum-tunnelling-modulated spin texture in ultrathin topological insulator Bi2Se3 films

Madhab Neupane; Anthony Richardella; J. Sánchez-Barriga; Su Yang Xu; Nasser Alidoust; Ilya Belopolski; Chang Liu; Guang Bian; Duming Zhang; D. Marchenko; A. Varykhalov; O. Rader; M. Leandersson; T. Balasubramanian; Tay-Rong Chang; Horng-Tay Jeng; Susmita Basak; Hsin Lin; A. Bansil; Nitin Samarth; M. Zahid Hasan

Understanding the spin-texture behaviour of boundary modes in ultrathin topological insulator films is critically essential for the design and fabrication of functional nanodevices. Here, by using spin-resolved photoemission spectroscopy with p-polarized light in topological insulator Bi2Se3 thin films, we report tunnelling-dependent evolution of spin configuration in topological insulator thin films across the metal-to-insulator transition. We report a systematic binding energy- and wavevector-dependent spin polarization for the topological surface electrons in the ultrathin gapped-Dirac-cone limit. The polarization decreases significantly with enhanced tunnelling realized systematically in thin insulating films, whereas magnitude of the polarization saturates to the bulk limit faster at larger wavevectors in thicker metallic films. We present a theoretical model that captures this delicate relationship between quantum tunnelling and Fermi surface spin polarization. Our high-resolution spin-based spectroscopic results suggest that the polarization current can be tuned to zero in thin insulating films forming the basis for a future spin-switch nanodevice.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Strength of correlation effects in the electronic structure of iron.

J. Sánchez-Barriga; J. Fink; V. Boni; Igor Di Marco; J. Braun; J. Minár; A. Varykhalov; O. Rader; V. Bellini; F. Manghi; H. Ebert; M. I. Katsnelson; A. I. Lichtenstein; Olle Eriksson; W. Eberhardt; H. A. Duerr

The strength of electronic correlation effects in the spin-dependent electronic structure of ferromagnetic bcc Fe(110) has been investigated by means of spin and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. The experimental results are compared to theoretical calculations within the three-body scattering approximation and within the dynamical mean-field theory, together with one-step model calculations of the photoemission process. This comparison indicates that the present state of the art many-body calculations, although improving the description of correlation effects in Fe, give too small mass renormalizations and scattering rates thus demanding more refined many-body theories including nonlocal fluctuations.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Giant Rashba‐Type Spin Splitting in Ferroelectric GeTe(111)

Marcus Liebmann; Christian Rinaldi; Domenico Di Sante; Jens Kellner; Christian Pauly; Rui Ning Wang; Jos E. Boschker; Alessandro Giussani; Stefano Bertoli; Matteo Cantoni; Lorenzo Baldrati; Marco Asa; I. Vobornik; G. Panaccione; D. Marchenko; J. Sánchez-Barriga; O. Rader; Raffaella Calarco; Silvia Picozzi; Riccardo Bertacco; Markus Morgenstern

Photoelectron spectroscopy in combination with piezoforce microscopy reveals that the helicity of Rashba bands is coupled to the nonvolatile ferroelectric polarization of GeTe(111). A novel surface Rashba band is found and fingerprints of a bulk Rashba band are identified by comparison with density functional theory calculations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Anisotropic two-dimensional electron gas at SrTiO3(110)

Zhiming Wang; Zhicheng Zhong; Xianfeng Hao; Stefan Gerhold; Bernhard Stöger; Michael Schmid; J. Sánchez-Barriga; A. Varykhalov; Cesare Franchini; K. Held; Ulrike Diebold

Significance Although still in its infancy, electronics based on all-oxide materials is a rapidly developing field, and strontium titanate is its key player. For this area to thrive, an atomic-scale control and understanding of the materials’ surfaces and interfaces needs to be achieved. A SrTiO3 crystal with (110) orientation automatically forms an overlayer that is more insulating than the bulk and chemically less reactive, akin to the native SiO2 on conventional wafer. With appropriate doping a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) forms underneath the SrTiO3(110) surface. This (110) 2DEG is very different from (001): The effective mass here depends on the quantum number, and a completely flat band can be realized. Such a flat band bears good prospects for, among others, magnetism and thermoelectricity. Two-dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) at oxide heterostructures are attracting considerable attention, as these might one day substitute conventional semiconductors at least for some functionalities. Here we present a minimal setup for such a 2DEG––the SrTiO3(110)-(4 × 1) surface, natively terminated with one monolayer of tetrahedrally coordinated titania. Oxygen vacancies induced by synchrotron radiation migrate underneath this overlayer; this leads to a confining potential and electron doping such that a 2DEG develops. Our angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and theoretical results show that confinement along (110) is strikingly different from the (001) crystal orientation. In particular, the quantized subbands show a surprising “semiheavy” band, in contrast with the analog in the bulk, and a high electronic anisotropy. This anisotropy and even the effective mass of the (110) 2DEG is tunable by doping, offering a high flexibility to engineer the properties of this system.


Nature Materials | 2016

Tailoring the nature and strength of electron-phonon interactions in the SrTiO3(001) 2D electron liquid

Z. B. Wang; S. McKeown Walker; A. Tamai; Yung Jui Wang; Z. Ristic; F. Y. Bruno; A. de la Torre; S. Riccò; N. C. Plumb; M. Shi; P. Hlawenka; J. Sánchez-Barriga; A. Varykhalov; T. K. Kim; M. Hoesch; P. D. C. King; W. Meevasana; Ulrike Diebold; J. Mesot; Brian Moritz; T. P. Devereaux; M. Radovic; F. Baumberger

Surfaces and interfaces offer new possibilities for tailoring the many-body interactions that dominate the electrical and thermal properties of transition metal oxides. Here, we use the prototypical two-dimensional electron liquid (2DEL) at the SrTiO3(001) surface to reveal a remarkably complex evolution of electron-phonon coupling with the tunable carrier density of this system. At low density, where superconductivity is found in the analogous 2DEL at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface, our angle-resolved photoemission data show replica bands separated by 100 meV from the main bands. This is a hallmark of a coherent polaronic liquid and implies long-range coupling to a single longitudinal optical phonon branch. In the overdoped regime the preferential coupling to this branch decreases and the 2DEL undergoes a crossover to a more conventional metallic state with weaker short-range electron-phonon interaction. These results place constraints on the theoretical description of superconductivity and allow a unified understanding of the transport properties in SrTiO3-based 2DELs.


Physical Review B | 2012

Probing two topological surface bands of Sb2Te3by spin-polarized photoemission spectroscopy

Christian Pauly; Gustav Bihlmayer; Marcus Liebmann; M. Grob; A. Georgi; D. Subramaniam; M. R. Scholz; J. Sánchez-Barriga; A. Varykhalov; Stefan Blügel; O. Rader; Markus Morgenstern

Using high resolution spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we map the electronic structure and spin texture of the surface states of the topological insulator Sb2Te3. In combination with density functional calculations (DFT), we directly show that Sb2Te3 exhibits a partially occupied, single spin-Dirac cone around the Fermi energy, which is topologically protected. DFT obtains a spin polarization of the occupied Dirac cone states of 80-90%, which is in reasonable agreement with the experimental data after careful background subtraction. Furthermore, we observe a strongly spin-orbit split surface band at lower energy. This state is found at 0.8eV below the Fermi level at the gamma-point, disperses upwards, and disappears at about 0.4eV below the Fermi level into two different bulk bands. Along the gamma-K direction, the band is located within a spin-orbit gap. According to an argument given by Pendry and Gurman in 1975, such a gap must contain a surface state, if it is located away from the high symmetry points of the Brillouin zone. Thus, the novel spin-split state is protected by symmetry, too.


Physical Review X | 2014

Photoemission of Bi2Se3 with Circularly Polarized Light: Probe of Spin Polarization or Means for Spin Manipulation?

J. Sánchez-Barriga; A. Varykhalov; J. Braun; Su Yang Xu; Nasser Alidoust; O. Kornilov; J. Minár; K. Hummer; G. Springholz; G. Bauer; R. Schumann; L. V. Yashina; H. Ebert; M. Z. Hasan; O. Rader

Topological insulators are characterized by Dirac-cone surface states with electron spins locked perpendicular to their linear momenta. Recent theoretical and experimental work implied that this specific spin texture should enable control of photoelectron spins by circularly polarized light. However, these reports questioned the so far accepted interpretation of spin-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy. We solve this puzzle and show that vacuum ultraviolet photons (50-70 eV) with linear or circular polarization indeed probe the initial-state spin texture of Bi2Se3 while circularly polarized 6-eV low-energy photons flip the electron spins out of plane and reverse their spin polarization, with its sign determined by the light helicity. Our photoemission calculations, taking into account the interplay between the varying probing depth, dipole-selection rules, and spin-dependent scattering effects involving initial and final states, explain these findings and reveal proper conditions for light-induced spin manipulation. Our results pave the way for future applications of topological insulators in optospintronic devices.

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O. Rader

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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A. Varykhalov

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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D. Marchenko

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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E. Golias

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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A. M. Shikin

Saint Petersburg State University

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M. R. Scholz

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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J. Minár

University of West Bohemia

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