Engineering Carrier Effective Masses in Ultrathin Quantum Wells of IrO 2
Author(s) -
Jason K. Kawasaki,
Choong H. Kim,
Jocienne N. Nelson,
Sophie Crisp,
Christian J. Zollner,
Eric Biegenwald,
John T. Heron,
Craig J. Fennie,
Darrell G. Schlom,
Kyle Shen
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
physical review letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.688
H-Index - 673
eISSN - 1079-7114
pISSN - 0031-9007
DOI - 10.1103/physrevlett.121.176802
Subject(s) - effective mass (spring–mass system) , electronic structure , quantum dot , materials science , electron , oxide , physics , condensed matter physics , nanotechnology , quantum mechanics , metallurgy
The carrier effective mass plays a crucial role in modern electronic, optical, and catalytic devices and is fundamentally related to key properties of solids such as the mobility and density of states. Here we demonstrate a method to deterministically engineer the effective mass using spatial confinement in metallic quantum wells of the transition metal oxide IrO_{2}. Using a combination of in situ angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements in conjunction with precise synthesis by oxide molecular-beam epitaxy, we show that the low-energy electronic subbands in ultrathin films of rutile IrO_{2} have their effective masses enhanced by up to a factor of 6 with respect to the bulk. The origin of this strikingly large mass enhancement is the confinement-induced quantization of the highly nonparabolic, three-dimensional electronic structure of IrO_{2} in the ultrathin limit. This mechanism lies in contrast to that observed in other transition metal oxides, in which mass enhancement tends to result from complex electron-electron interactions and is difficult to control. Our results demonstrate a general route towards the deterministic enhancement and engineering of carrier effective masses in spatially confined systems, based on an understanding of the three-dimensional bulk electronic structure.
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