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Fragile flat-band surface state in ternary transition metal chalcogenides NbIrTe<sub>4</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Ternary transition metal chalcogenides have been predicted to exhibit both topological Weyl semimetal properties in bulk crystals and quantum spin-hall insulating behavior in their monolayer form[1]. NbIrTe4 features an orthorhombic lattice structure (Td-phase) with broken inversion-symmetry similar to WTe2, with a topological band structure predicted to host 16 Weyl points in the Brillouin zone[2]. Here we present a recent scanning tunneling microscopy study of the surface electronic structure of NbIrTe4, together with ARPES measurements and DFT calculations. On one of the two inequivalent surfaces, we observe a prominent, narrow surface-state peak – with a FWHM around 10 mV – located about 8 meV below the Fermi level. This is in excellent agreement with our ARPES and DFT results, and corresponds to a flat band across the quasi-1D rows, as observed in previous ARPES experiments[3]. This sharp surface-state feature vanishes in tunnelling spectroscopy in areas where the top layer was shifted, disrupting the symmetry and polarization at the surface.

[1] Liu, J., et al., Nano Lett. 2017, 17, 467


[2] Li, L. et al., Phys. Rev. B 2017, 96, 024106


[3] Ekahana, S. A. et al., Phys. Rev. B 2020 102, 085126

Presenters

  • Jiabin Yu

    University of British Columbia

Authors

  • Jiabin Yu

    University of British Columbia

  • Jiabin Yu

    University of British Columbia

  • Giang Nguyen

    University of British Columbia

  • Vanessa King

    University of British Columbia

  • Mohamed Oudah

    University of British Columbia

  • Hsiang-Hsi Kung

    University of British Columbia

  • Meigan C Aronson

    University of British Columbia

  • Andrea Damascelli

    University of British Columbia, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia

  • Lukas Muechler

    Penn State University

  • Sarah Burke

    University of British Columbia, The University of British Columbia