Circular dichroism in hard X-ray photoelectron diffraction observed by time-of-flight momentum microscopy

•Experimental and theoretical results of CDAD for several core levels (Si, Ge, Mo and W) are discussed and compared.•X-ray CDAD asymmetries are very large, up to > 80% at 6 keV. The fine structure in CDAD is more pronounced compared to the corresponding intensity patterns, providing additional in...

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Published inUltramicroscopy Vol. 250; no. C; p. 113750
Main Authors Tkach, O., Vo, T.-P., Fedchenko, O., Medjanik, K., Lytvynenko, Y., Babenkov, S., Vasilyev, D., Nguyen, Q.L., Peixoto, T.R.F., Gloskowskii, A., Schlueter, C., Chernov, S., Hoesch, M., Kutnyakhov, D., Scholz, M., Wenthaus, L., Wind, N., Marotzke, S., Winkelmann, A., Rossnagel, K., Minár, J., Elmers, H.-J., Schönhense, G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.08.2023
Elsevier
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Summary:•Experimental and theoretical results of CDAD for several core levels (Si, Ge, Mo and W) are discussed and compared.•X-ray CDAD asymmetries are very large, up to > 80% at 6 keV. The fine structure in CDAD is more pronounced compared to the corresponding intensity patterns, providing additional information.•One-step photoemission calculations show reasonable agreement with experiment.•Core-level CDAD is a general phenomenon that is independent of atomic number. X-ray photoelectron diffraction (XPD) is a powerful technique that yields detailed structural information of solids and thin films that complements electronic structure measurements. Among the strongholds of XPD we can identify dopant sites, track structural phase transitions, and perform holographic reconstruction. High-resolution imaging of kll-distributions (momentum microscopy) presents a new approach to core-level photoemission. It yields full-field kx-ky XPD patterns with unprecedented acquisition speed and richness in details. Here, we show that beyond the pure diffraction information, XPD patterns exhibit pronounced circular dichroism in the angular distribution (CDAD) with asymmetries up to 80%, alongside with rapid variations on a small kll-scale (0.1 Å−1). Measurements with circularly-polarized hard X-rays (hν = 6 keV) for a number of core levels, including Si, Ge, Mo and W, prove that core-level CDAD is a general phenomenon that is independent of atomic number. The fine structure in CDAD is more pronounced compared to the corresponding intensity patterns. Additionally, they obey the same symmetry rules as found for atomic and molecular species, and valence bands. The CD is antisymmetric with respect to the mirror planes of the crystal, whose signatures are sharp zero lines. Calculations using both the Bloch-wave approach and one-step photoemission reveal the origin of the fine structure that represents the signature of Kikuchi diffraction. To disentangle the roles of photoexcitation and diffraction, XPD has been implemented into the Munich SPRKKR package to unify the one-step model of photoemission and multiple scattering theory.
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USDOE
AC02-76SF00515
ISSN:0304-3991
1879-2723
DOI:10.1016/j.ultramic.2023.113750