ACS Nano, volume 11, issue 1, pages 368-374

Spin–Orbit Coupling Induced Gap in Graphene on Pt(111) with Intercalated Pb Monolayer

Daria Sostina 1
L. Petaccia 3
G. Di Santo 3
Sangeeta Thakur 3
E.V. Chulkov 1, 2, 4, 5
Show full list: 9 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2017-01-06
Journal: ACS Nano
scimago Q1
SJR4.593
CiteScore26.0
Impact factor15.8
ISSN19360851, 1936086X
General Physics and Astronomy
General Materials Science
General Engineering
Abstract
Graphene is one of the most promising materials for nanoelectronics owing to its unique Dirac cone-like dispersion of the electronic state and high mobility of the charge carriers. However, to facilitate the implementation of the graphene-based devices, an essential change of its electronic structure, a creation of the band gap should controllably be done. Brought about by two fundamentally different mechanisms, a sublattice symmetry breaking or an induced strong spin-orbit interaction, the band gap appearance can drive graphene into a narrow-gap semiconductor or a 2D topological insulator phase, respectively, with both cases being technologically relevant. The later case, characterized by a spin-orbit gap between the valence and conduction bands, can give rise to the spin-polarized topologically protected edge states. Here, we study the effect of the spin-orbit interaction enhancement in graphene placed in contact with a lead monolayer. By means of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we show that intercalation of the Pb interlayer between the graphene sheet and the Pt(111) surface leads to formation of a gap of ∼200 meV at the Dirac point of graphene. Spin-resolved measurements confirm the splitting to be of a spin-orbit nature, and the measured near-gap spin structure resembles that of the quantum spin Hall state in graphene, proposed by Kane and Mele [ Phys. Rev. Lett. 2005 , 95 , 226801 ]. With a bandstructure tuned in this way, graphene acquires a functionality going beyond its intrinsic properties and becomes more attractive for possible spintronic applications.

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