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One-Dimensional Electron Gas Confined along Nanowrinkles in a Unidirectional Charge Density Wave Material
  • Kim, Eunseo ;
  • Lee, Sanghun ;
  • Yang, Hyungryul ;
  • Hashimoto, Makoto ;
  • Lu, Donghui ;
  • Park, Jongho ;
  • Kim, Changyoung ;
  • Wulferding, Dirk ;
  • Kim, Sunghun ;
  • Cho, Doohee
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Publication Year
2025-04-29
Journal
ACS Nano
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
ACS Nano, Vol.19 No.16, pp.15767-15774
Keyword
nanowrinklesquantum well statesscanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopytopological defectsunidirectional charge density waves
Mesh Keyword
Charge-density wave materialCharge-density-wavesNanowrinkleOne-dimensionalQuantum-well stateScanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopyTopological defectTwo-dimensional instabilityTwo-dimensional materialsUnidirectional charge density wave
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Materials Science (all)Engineering (all)Physics and Astronomy (all)
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) materials inherently exhibit instabilities. Structurally, this may lead to modulations along the third dimension, e.g., wrinkles. Electronically, 2D instabilities can manifest themselves as charge density waves (CDWs). Although wrinkles can alter anisotropic electronic structures susceptible to forming CDWs, less is known about their impact on broken-symmetry ground states. Here, using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, we investigate the CDW states on the wrinkled surface of DyTe3. We identify elongated, parallel nanoscale wrinkles stabilized by ribbon-shaped defects. Interestingly, the CDW order persists across the nanowrinkles with a gradual phase shift but is locally suppressed near the defects, where phase windings occur. In addition, these defects induce quantum confinement effects along the nanowrinkles, indicating the presence of one-dimensional metallic states with hole-like dispersion, while angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy identifies a gap along the wrinkle direction. We ascribe this discrepancy to strain-induced changes in the Fermi surface, which lead to the closure of the gap at the sites of the nanowrinkles. Taken together, our results underscore the complex interplay between structural features and Fermi surface topology, allowing for the deliberate manipulation of quantum states in strongly correlated systems via local crystal deformations.
ISSN
1936-086X
Language
eng
URI
https://aurora.ajou.ac.kr/handle/2018.oak/38284
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=105003761432&origin=inward
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c18943
Journal URL
http://pubs.acs.org/journal/ancac3
Type
Article
Funding
The authors thank T. Benschop, J.-F. Ge, and K.S. Burch for valuable discussions. The authors also thank K. Han and S. Gim for their technical support during ARPES measurements. E.K., S.L., H.Y., and D.C. were supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korea government (Nos. RS-2023-00251265, RS-2024-00337267, and RS-2024-00442483). S.K. was supported by NRF grant funded by the Korea government (Nos. 2021R1A6A1A10044950, RS-2023-00285390, and RS-2023-00210828). J.P. and C.K. acknowledge support from the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) (Grant No. IBS-R009-G2). The use of the SSRL, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under contracts No. DE-AC0276SF00515.
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