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Quasi-Homoepitaxial Growth of Highly Strained Alkali-Metal Ultrathin Films on Kagome Superconductors.

Takemi KatoKosuke NakayamaYongkai LiZhiwei WangKatsuaki SugawaraKiyohisa TanakaTakashi TakahashiYugui YaoTakafumi Sato
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Applying lattice strain to thin films, a critical factor to tailor their properties such as stabilizing a structural phase unstable at ambient pressure, generally necessitates heteroepitaxial growth to control the lattice mismatch with substrate. Therefore, while homoepitaxy, the growth of thin film on a substrate made of the same material, is a useful method to fabricate high-quality thin films, its application to studying strain-induced structural phases is limited. Contrary to this general belief, here the quasi-homoepitaxial growth of Cs and Rb thin films is reported with substantial in-plane compressive strain. This is achieved by utilizing the alkali-metal layer existing in bulk crystal of kagome metals AV 3 Sb 5 (A = Cs and Rb) as a structural template. The angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements reveal the formation of metallic quantum well states and notable thickness-dependent quasiparticle lifetime. Comparison with density functional theory calculations suggests that the obtained thin films crystalize in the face-centered cubic structure, which is typically stable only under high pressure in bulk crystals. These findings provide a useful approach for synthesizing highly strained thin films by quasi-homoepitaxy, and pave the way for investigating many-body interactions in Fermi liquids with tunable dimensionality.
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