4.8 Article

Engineering Carrier Effective Masses in Ultrathin Quantum Wells of IrO2

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 121, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.176802

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation through the Platform for the Accelerated Realization, Analysis, and Discovery of Interface Materials (PARADIM) [DMR-1539918]
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [FA9550-12-1-0335, FA2386-12-1-3103]
  3. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation as part of the EPiQS initiative [GBMF3850]
  4. Cornell Center for Materials Research through the MRSEC program [NSF DMR-1120296]
  5. Cornell Nanoscale Facility [EECS-1542081]
  6. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1650441]

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The carrier effective mass plays a crucial role in modern electronic, optical, and catalytic devices and is fundamentally related to key properties of solids such as the mobility and density of states. Here we demonstrate a method to deterministically engineer the effective mass using spatial confinement in metallic quantum wells of the transition metal oxide IrO2. Using a combination of in situ angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements in conjunction with precise synthesis by oxide molecular-beam epitaxy, we show that the low-energy electronic subbands in ultrathin films of rutile IrO2 have their effective masses enhanced by up to a factor of 6 with respect to the bulk. The origin of this strikingly large mass enhancement is the confinement-induced quantization of the highly nonparabolic, three-dimensional electronic structure of IrO2 in the ultrathin limit. This mechanism lies in contrast to that observed in other transition metal oxides, in which mass enhancement tends to result from complex electron-electron interactions and is difficult to control. Our results demonstrate a general route towards the deterministic enhancement and engineering of carrier effective masses in spatially confined systems, based on an understanding of the three-dimensional bulk electronic structure.

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