Electronic structure, interactions, and spin-orbit coupling at the CoO$_2$-terminated surfaces of delafossite oxide metals
ORAL
Abstract
The ABO$_2$ family of delafossite oxide metals has recently found renewed prominence due to their remarkable transport properties. The Pd- and Pt-based cobaltates are the most conductive oxides known, with room-temperature resistivities lower per carrier even than copper metal [1,2]. This is underpinned by extremely broad bandwidths of the bulk electronic structure around the Fermi level, dominated by Pd/Pt-derived carriers that behave remarkably like free electrons [2]. Here, we will discuss how the polar CoO$_2$-terminated surface of PtCoO$_2$ hosts a markedly different electronic structure to that of the bulk. From angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we will demonstrate that this transition-metal oxide surface layer supports massive Co-derived surface states. We will show how these exhibit a pronounced interplay of many-body interactions and spin-orbit coupling, and will discuss how these together shape the low-energy surface electronic structure of this compound. [1] Hicks et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 109 (2012) 116401; [2] Kushwaha et al., Science Adv. 1 (2015) e1500692.
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