This thesis contains a selection of the results on the shallow electron states of quantum materials that I obtained as doctoral student of the Scuola di Dottorato in Fisica, Astrofisica e Fisica Applicata at the Università degli Studi di Milano. I carried out my doctoral research activity mostly at the TASC-IOM CNR laboratory, in the framework of the NFFA and APE-beamline facilities (Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste), as well in dedicated sessions at the I2; beamline of the Diamond light source, Harwell Campus, UK. To access the electronic properties of materials I specialised myself in photoemission spectroscopy techniques. High quality samples are a prerequisite for any attempt to study quantum materials so that a major effort in my PhD project has been to master the growth of novel quantum materials by means of Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD). Given that the PLD is integrated in the suite of UHV facilities attached in-situ to the APE beamline, I directly characterised the electronic properties of the PLD grown samples exploiting both the spectroscopic techniques available at the beamline (ARPES, X-ray photoemission and absorption spectroscopies: XPS and XAS), either ex-situ structural characterisation tools (X-ray diffraction –XRD– and X-ray reflectivity, XRR).
NFFA Thesis
University of Milan Master's Degree Thesis, (2019)
Layer-by-layer growth of TiO2 - anatase: evolution 2D/3D of the electron states
A. Troglia (Supervisors: G. Rossi, P. Orgiani, I. Vobornik)
Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is mainly present in nature in three different polymorphs: rutile, brookite and anatase. In particular, the latter is largely studied due to its promising future applications in several devices like memristors and solar cells, as well as implementations in spintronics and transparent conductive oxides. In this framework, the most important physical quantity is certainly conductivity: it is thus fundamental to analyze and control the electronic properties of anatase with a particular attention to the surface, which plays a remarkable role in the previous applications. Rutile TiO2 is thermodinamically favoured at the common ambient pressure and temperature, while anatase is favoured instead at the nanometric scale: for these reasons, thin films Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD) enables a controlled and functionalized growth of anatase, thanks to the extreme versatility and accuracy of this technique. This work was carried out at the NFFA (Nano Foundries and Fine Analysis) - APE (Advanced Photoelectric Effect) beamline, part of the CNR - IOM group, which exploits the synchrotron radiation emitted by the third generation storage ring Elettra. In particular, APE beamline is a state-of-the-art surface science laboratory, which includes a thin film pulsed laser deposition chamber connected through a multi-component ultra-high vacuum (UHV) system to two distinct endstations, where the electronic properties of the samples are analyzed with low energy (8 120 eV ) and high energy (150 1600 eV ) x-rays. It is thus possible to deposit thin films of the desired material and subsequently perform measurements with synchrotron light without exposing the sample to air, preventing an irreversible contamination of the surface.
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