Photoemission and angle-resolved photoemission : A tool to probe the electronic structure of materials - Patrick Le Fèvre (SOLEIL synchrotron)

15 May 2019, 11:15
45m
5th Floor (LINXS)

5th Floor

LINXS

Delta 5, 5th and 6th floor, IDEON Building:, Scheelevägen 19, 223 70 Lund

Description

XPS
Photoemission is based on the photoelectric effect. An incident photon is absorbed by an atom which uses its energy hν to emit an electron. In a photoemission experiment, this photoelectron is collected by an analyzer able to measure its kinetic energy as well as, in angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES), its emission angle. In this lecture, we will describe this process and the information contained in photoemission spectra.

One can first make a clear difference between the observation of core levels, atomic-like electrons described by the usual quantum numbers n, l and ml, and the more or less delocalized valence electrons described by their binding energy and their wavevector k.

Core level spectroscopy gives a quite direct access to the local chemical environment of the excited atom. They can also be measured in a pump-probe experiment, where a pulse of UV or visible light prepares the material into an excited state (pump) prior to its analysis by photoemission with a soft X-ray photon (probe). Variation of core level binding energy with the time delay between the pump and the probe allows for a measurement of the excited state lifetime, a key parameter for materials to be used in solar cells or for hydrogen production by water photoelectrolysis.

On valence states, ARPES is a unique tool to give an image of the material band structure. The basis of this technique will also be described.

Presentation materials