How Kondo Holes Create Intense Nanoscale Heavy-Fermion Hybridization Disorder
Mohammad H. Hamidian, Andrew R. Schmidt, In\^es A. Firmo, Milan P., Allan, Phelim Bradley, Jim D. Garrett, Travis J. Williams, Graeme M. Luke,, Yonatan Dubi, Alexander V. Balatsky, J.C. S\'eamus Davis

TL;DR
This study visualizes the atomic-scale electronic structure of Kondo-holes created by substituting Thorium for Uranium in URu2Si2, revealing intense nanoscale hybridization heterogeneity and providing insights into heavy fermion formation.
Contribution
First direct imaging of electronic structure at Kondo-holes, showing hybridization modulations and heterogeneity in a heavy fermion system.
Findings
Observation of electronic bound states at Thorium atoms
Detection of hybridization strength modulations around Kondo-holes
Identification of nanoscale hybridization heterogeneity
Abstract
Replacing a magnetic atom by a spinless atom in a heavy fermion compound generates a quantum state often referred to as a 'Kondo-hole'. No experimental imaging has been achieved of the atomic-scale electronic structure of a Kondo-hole, or of their destructive impact (Lawrence JM, et al. (1996) Kondo hole behavior in Ce0. 97La0. 03Pd3. Phys Rev B 53:12559-12562; Bauer ED, et al. (2011) Electronic inhomogeneity in a Kondo lattice. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 108:6857-6861) on the hybridization process between conduction and localized electrons which generates the heavy fermion state. Here we report visualization of the electronic structure at Kondo-holes created by substituting spinless Thorium atoms for magnetic Uranium atoms in the heavy-fermion system URu2Si2. At each Thorium atom, an electronic bound state is observed. Moreover, surrounding each Thorium atom we find the unusual modulations of…
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