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Spectroscopic evidence of flat bands in breathing kagome semiconductor Nb<sub>3</sub>I<sub>8</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Kagome materials have become solid grounds to study the interplay among geometry, topology, correlation, and magnetism. Recently, semiconductors Nb3X8 (X = Cl, Br, I)

have been predicted to be two-dimensional (2D) magnets and importantly these materials possess breathing kagome geometry. Electronic structure study of these promising

materials is still lacking. Here, we report the spectroscopic evidence of flat and weakly dispersing bands in breathing-kagome semiconductor Nb3I8 around 500 meV binding energy, which is well supported by our first-principles calculations. These bands originate from the breathing kagome lattice of Niobium atoms and have Nb d character. They are found to be sensitive to polarization of the incident photon beam. Our study provides insight into the electronic structure and at band topology in an exfoliable kagome semiconductor thereby providing an important platform to understand the interaction of geometry and electron correlations in 2D material.

Presenters

  • Madhab Neupane

    University of Central Florida

Authors

  • Madhab Neupane

    University of Central Florida

  • Sabin Regmi

    University of Central Florida, University of Central Florida; Idaho National Laboratory

  • Tharindu Warnakulasooriya Fernando

    University of Washington, tharindu@uw.edu

  • Yuzhou Zhao

    University of Washington

  • Anup Pradhan Sakhya

    University of Central Florida

  • Gyanendra Dhakal

    University of Central Florida

  • Iftakhar Bin Elius

    University of Central Florida, University of Central FLorida

  • Hector Vazquez

    University of Central Florida

  • Jonathan D Denlinger

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California

  • Jihui Yang

    University of Washington

  • Jiun-Haw Chu

    University of Washington, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA

  • Xiaodong Xu

    University of Washington

  • Ting Cao

    University of Washington, Department of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Washington