Energetic, spatial and momentum character of a buried interface: the two-dimensional electron gas between two metal oxides
S. Nem\v{s}\'ak, G. Conti, A.X. Gray, G.K. P\'alsson, C. Conlon,, D.Eiteneer, A. Keqi, A. Rattanachata, A.Y. Saw, A. Bostwick, L. Moreschini,, V. Strocov, M. Kobayashi, W. Stolte, S. Ueda, K. Kobayashi, A. Gloskovskii,, W. Drube, C. Jackson, P. Moetakef, A. Janotti, L. Bjaalie

TL;DR
This study combines advanced experimental and theoretical methods to characterize the spatial and momentum properties of a two-dimensional electron gas at a buried oxide interface, revealing detailed insights into its structure and origin.
Contribution
It introduces a novel combination of photoemission techniques and theoretical modeling to analyze the 2DEG at a buried oxide interface with unprecedented spatial and momentum resolution.
Findings
The 2DEG extends throughout the 6-unit-cell STO layer.
The momentum dispersion of the 2DEG states was measured.
Oxygen vacancies are unlikely the origin of the 2DEG.
Abstract
The interfaces between two condensed phases often exhibit emergent physical properties that can lead to new physics and novel device applications, and are the subject of intense study in many disciplines. We here apply novel experimental and theoretical techniques to the characterization of one such interesting interface system: the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) formed in multilayers consisting of SrTiO (STO) and GdTiO (GTO). This system has been the subject of multiple studies recently and shown to exhibit very high carrier charge densities and ferromagnetic effects, among other intriguing properties. We have studied a 2DEG-forming multilayer of the form [6 unit cells STO/3 unit cells of GTO] using a unique array of photoemission techniques including soft and hard x-ray excitation, soft x-ray angle-resolved photoemission, core-level spectroscopy, resonant…
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