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Dive into the research topics where T. Valla is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Valla.


Physical Review Letters | 1999

Many-Body Effects in Angle-Resolved Photoemission: Quasiparticle Energy and Lifetime of a Mo(110) Surface State

T. Valla; A. V. Fedorov; P. D. Johnson; Steve Hulbert

Recent investigations of strongly correlated electron systems have questioned the validity of one of the most fundamental paradigms in solid state physics— Fermi liquid theory. The latter picture is based on the existence of “quasiparticles,” or single-particle-like low energy excitations which obey the exclusion principle and have lifetimes long enough to be considered as particles. Strictly speaking, the quasiparticle concept is restricted to zero temperature and a narrow region around the Fermi level [1], but its usefulness often continues to finite temperatures, and energies away from the Fermi level [2]. Indications for possible non-Fermi-liquid behavior have been found in some organic one-dimensional conductors [3] and in the normal state of high temperature superconductors [4]. A whole variety of experimental techniques have been employed in the search for such behavior, including resistivity measurements [5], infrared spectroscopy [6], scanning tunneling spectroscopy [7], and time-resolved two-photon photoemission [8]. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has an advantage, in that the energy and lifetime of the photohole are directly observable in the experiment. ARPES in principle measures the quasiparticle spectral function [9]:


Physical Review Letters | 2008

K-Doping Dependence of the Fermi Surface of the Iron-Arsenic Ba1-xKxFe2As2 Superconductor Using Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy

Chang Liu; German D. Samolyuk; Y. Lee; Ni Ni; Takeshi Kondo; A. F. Santander-Syro; S. L. Bud'ko; J.L. McChesney; Eli Rotenberg; T. Valla; A. V. Fedorov; P. C. Canfield; B. N. Harmon; A. Kaminski

C. Liu, G. D. Samolyuk, Y. Lee, N. Ni, T. Kondo, A. F. Santander-Syro, 3 S. L. Bud’ko, J. L. McChesney, E. Rotenberg, T. Valla, A. V. Fedorov, P. C. Canfield, B. N. Harmon, and A. Kaminski Ames Laboratory and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA Laboratoire Photons Et Matière, UPR-5 CNRS, ESPCI, 10 rue Vauquelin, 75231 Paris cedex 5, France Labratoire de Physique des Solides, UMR-8502 CNRS, Université Paris-Sud, Bât. 510, 91405 Orsay, France Advanced Light Source, Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA Condensed Matter Physics and Materials Science Dept., Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973, USA (Dated: June 20, 2008)


Nature Physics | 2014

Observation of the chiral magnetic effect in ZrTe5

Qiang Li; Dmitri E. Kharzeev; T. Valla; J. A. Schneeloch; Ruidan Zhong; A. V. Fedorov; Ivo Pletikosic; Yuan Huang; G. D. Gu; Cheng Zhang

The chiral magnetic effect is the generation of electric current induced by chirality imbalance in the presence of magnetic field. It is a macroscopic manifestation of the quantum anomaly in relativistic field theory of chiral fermions (massless spin 1/2 particles with a definite projection of spin on momentum) – a dramatic phenomenon arising from a collective motion of particles and antiparticles in the Dirac sea. The recent discovery of Dirac semimetals with chiral quasi-particles opens a fascinating possibility to study this phenomenon in condensed matter experiments. Here we report on the first observation of chiral magnetic effect through the measurement of magneto-transport in zirconium pentatelluride, ZrTe₅. Our angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy experiments show that this material’s electronic structure is consistent with a 3D Dirac semimetal. We observe a large negative magnetoresistance when magnetic field is parallel with the current. The measured quadratic field dependence of the magnetoconductance is a clear indication of the chiral magnetic effect. Furthermore, the observed phenomenon stems from the effective transmutation of Dirac semimetal into a Weyl semimetal induced by the parallel electric and magnetic fields that represent a topologically nontrivial gauge field background.


Nature | 2008

Emergence of preformed Cooper pairs from the doped Mott insulating state in Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8+ δ

H.-B. Yang; J. D. Rameau; P. D. Johnson; T. Valla; A. Tsvelik; G. D. Gu

Superconductors are characterized by an energy gap that represents the energy needed to break the pairs of electrons (Cooper pairs) apart. At temperatures considerably above those associated with superconductivity, the high-transition-temperature copper oxides have an additional ‘pseudogap’. It has been unclear whether this represents preformed pairs of electrons that have not achieved the coherence necessary for superconductivity, or whether it reflects some alternative ground state that competes with superconductivity. Paired electrons should display particle–hole symmetry with respect to the Fermi level (the energy of the highest occupied level in the electronic system), but competing states need not show such symmetry. Here we report a photoemission study of the underdoped copper oxide Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ that shows the opening of a symmetric gap only in the anti-nodal region, contrary to the expectation that pairing would take place in the nodal region. It is therefore evident that the pseudogap does reflect the formation of preformed pairs of electrons and that the pairing occurs only in well-defined directions of the underlying lattice.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Electronic Structure of the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3 Using Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy: Evidence for a Nearly Full Surface Spin Polarization

Z.-H. Pan; Elio Vescovo; A. V. Fedorov; Dillon Gardner; Yueh-Lin Lee; Shaoyan Chu; G. D. Gu; T. Valla

We performed high-resolution spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy studies of the electronic structure and the spin texture on the surface of Bi2Se3, a model TI. By tuning the photon energy, we found that the topological surface state is well separated from the bulk states in the vicinity of kz = Z plane of the bulk Brillouin zone. The spin-resolved measurements in that region indicate a very high degree of spin polarization of the surface state, ~0.75, much higher than previously reported. Our results demonstrate that the topological surface state on Bi2Se3 is highly spin polarized and that the dominant factors limiting the polarization are mainly extrinsic.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Electronic structure basis for the extraordinary magnetoresistance in WTe2

Ivo Pletikosic; Mazhar N. Ali; A. V. Fedorov; R. J. Cava; T. Valla

The electronic structure basis of the extremely large magnetoresistance in layered nonmagnetic tungsten ditelluride has been investigated by angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy. Hole and electron pockets of approximately the same size were found at low temperatures, suggesting that carrier compensation should be considered the primary source of the effect. The material exhibits a highly anisotropic Fermi surface from which the pronounced anisotropy of the magnetoresistance follows. A change in the Fermi surface with temperature was found and a high-density-of-states band that may take over conduction at higher temperatures and cause the observed turn-on behavior of the magnetoresistance in WTe2 was identified.


Nature | 2002

Coherence–incoherence and dimensional crossover in layered strongly correlated metals

T. Valla; P. D. Johnson; Z. Yusof; B. Wells; Q. Li; S.M. Loureiro; R. J. Cava; M. Mikami; Y. Mori; M. Yoshimura; T. Sasaki

The properties of an interacting electron system depend on the electron correlations and the effective dimensionality. For example, Coulomb repulsion between electrons may inhibit, or completely block, conduction by intersite electron hopping, thereby determining whether a material is a metal or an insulator. Furthermore, correlation effects increase as the number of effective dimensions decreases; in three-dimensional systems, the low-energy electronic states behave as quasiparticles, whereas in one-dimensional systems, even weak interactions break the quasiparticles into collective excitations. Dimensionality is particularly important for exotic low-dimensional materials where one- or two-dimensional building blocks are loosely connected into a three-dimensional whole. Here we examine two such layered metallic systems with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and electronic transport measurements, and we find a crossover in the number of effective dimensions—from two to three—with decreasing temperature. This is apparent from the observation that, in the direction perpendicular to the layers, the materials have an insulating character at high temperatures but become metal-like at low temperatures, whereas transport within the layers remains metallic over the whole temperature range. We propose that this change in effective dimensionality correlates with the presence of coherent quasiparticles within the layers.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Photoemission spectroscopy of magnetic and nonmagnetic impurities on the surface of the Bi2Se3 topological insulator.

T. Valla; Z.-H. Pan; Dillon Gardner; Yueh-Lin Lee; Shaoyan Chu

Dirac-like surface states on surfaces of topological insulators have a chiral spin structure that suppresses backscattering and protects the coherence of these states in the presence of nonmagnetic scatterers. In contrast, magnetic scatterers should open the backscattering channel via the spin-flip processes and degrade the states coherence. We present angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy studies of the electronic structure and the scattering rates upon the adsorption of various magnetic and nonmagnetic impurities on the surface of Bi2Se3, a model topological insulator. We reveal a remarkable insensitivity of the topological surface state to both nonmagnetic and magnetic impurities in the low impurity concentration regime. Scattering channels open up with the emergence of hexagonal warping in the high-doping regime, irrespective of the impuritys magnetic moment.


Nature Communications | 2013

The mechanism of caesium intercalation of graphene.

Marin Petrović; I. Šrut Rakić; Sven Runte; Carsten Busse; J. T. Sadowski; Predrag Lazić; Ivo Pletikosic; Z. H. Pan; Milorad Milun; Petar Pervan; Nicolae Atodiresei; Radovan Brako; Damir Šokčević; T. Valla; Thomas Michely; Marko Kralj

Properties of many layered materials, including copper- and iron-based superconductors, topological insulators, graphite and epitaxial graphene, can be manipulated by the inclusion of different atomic and molecular species between the layers via a process known as intercalation. For example, intercalation in graphite can lead to superconductivity and is crucial in the working cycle of modern batteries and supercapacitors. Intercalation involves complex diffusion processes along and across the layers; however, the microscopic mechanisms and dynamics of these processes are not well understood. Here we report on a novel mechanism for intercalation and entrapment of alkali atoms under epitaxial graphene. We find that the intercalation is adjusted by the van der Waals interaction, with the dynamics governed by defects anchored to graphene wrinkles. Our findings are relevant for the future design and application of graphene-based nano-structures. Similar mechanisms can also have a role for intercalation of layered materials.


Physical Review Letters | 2000

Temperature dependent scattering rates at the fermi surface of optimally doped Bi(2)Sr(2)CaCu(2)O(8+delta)

T. Valla; A. Fedorov; P. D. Johnson; Q. Li; G.D. Gu; N. Koshizuka

For optimally doped Bi(2)Sr(2)CaCu(2)O(8+delta), scattering rates in the normal state are found to have a linear temperature dependence over most of the Fermi surface. In the immediate vicinity of the (pi, 0) point, the scattering rates are nearly constant in the normal state, consistent with models in which scattering at this point determines the c-axis transport. In the superconducting state, the scattering rates away from the nodal direction appear to level off and become temperature independent.

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P. D. Johnson

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. V. Fedorov

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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G. D. Gu

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Ivo Pletikosic

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Genda Gu

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Fedorov

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Z.-H. Pan

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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