Floating Surface Band in WO<sub>2</sub>I<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

WO2I2 is a long-known member of the tungsten oxyhalide family of compounds (WO2X2 X = halide) that first garnered interest in the late 1960s due to its role in the chemical vapor transport of elemental tungsten in halogen lamps. Since its discovery, however, the electronic and structural properties of WO2I2 remain unresolved. Based on recent single crystal x-ray diffraction experiments and density functional theory (DFT) analysis, WO2I2 was reported to be a metal with an orthorhombic unit cell (#71: Immm). Here, we present a combination of transport, scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS), angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), and optical conductivity measurements which demonstrate that WO2I2 is in fact a semiconductor with a 0.5V gap, in direct contrast with the metallic DFT band structures calculated using the orthorhombic structure. Interestingly, we also observe a surface band that lies within the gap of the semiconductor. We show that this comes from the unique three-dimensional hybridization in WO2I2 and its modification at the surface. We will also discuss new structural refinements which suggest that WO2I2 has a disordered, monoclinic unit cell.

Presenters

  • Eric Seewald

    • Columbia University

Authors

  • Eric Seewald

    • Columbia University
  • Jordan Cox

    • Columbia University
  • Xiong Huang

    • Columbia University
  • Asish K. Kundu

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Yinming Shao

    • Columbia University
  • Till Schertenleib

    • École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
  • Chun-Ying Huang

    • Columbia University
  • Zhi Lin

    • Columbia University
  • Xiaoyang Zhu

    • Columbia University
  • Simon L Billinge

    • Columbia Univ
    • Columbia University
  • Dmitri N Basov

    • Columbia University
  • Raquel Queiroz

    • Columbia University
  • Sophie Beck

    • Simons Foundation
  • Xavier Roy

    • Columbia University
  • Abhay N Pasupathy

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University & Brookhaven National Laboratory