Abstract
The dilute magnetic semiconductors have promise in spin-based electronics applications due to their potential for ferromagnetic order at room temperature, and various unique switching and spin-dependent conductivity properties. However, the precise mechanism by which the transition-metal doping produces ferromagnetism has been controversial. Here we have studied a dilute magnetic semiconductor (5% manganese-doped gallium arsenide) with Bragg-reflection standing-wave hard X-ray angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, and resolved its electronic structure into element- and momentum- resolved components. The measured valence band intensities have been projected into element-resolved components using analogous energy scans of Ga 3d, Mn 2p, and As 3d core levels, with results in excellent agreement with element-projected Bloch spectral functions and clarification of the electronic structure of this prototypical material. This technique should be broadly applicable to other multi-element materials.
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CITATION STYLE
Nemšák, S., Gehlmann, M., Kuo, C. T., Lin, S. C., Schlueter, C., Mlynczak, E., … Fadley, C. S. (2018). Element- and momentum-resolved electronic structure of the dilute magnetic semiconductor manganese doped gallium arsenide. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05823-z
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