Polarized hard X-ray photoemission system with micro-positioning technique for probing ground-state symmetry of strongly correlated materials

J Synchrotron Radiat. 2016 May;23(Pt 3):735-42. doi: 10.1107/S1600577516003003. Epub 2016 Apr 1.

Abstract

An angle-resolved linearly polarized hard X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (HAXPES) system has been developed to study the ground-state symmetry of strongly correlated materials. The linear polarization of the incoming X-ray beam is switched by a transmission-type phase retarder composed of two diamond (100) crystals. The best value of the degree of linear polarization was found to be -0.96, containing a vertical polarization component of 98%. A newly developed low-temperature two-axis manipulator enables easy polar and azimuthal rotations to select the detection direction of photoelectrons. The lowest temperature achieved was 9 K, offering the chance to access the ground state even for strongly correlated electron systems in cubic symmetry. A co-axial sample monitoring system with long-working-distance microscope enables the same region on the sample surface to be measured before and after rotation. Combining this sample monitoring system with a micro-focused X-ray beam by means of an ellipsoidal Kirkpatrick-Baez mirror (25 µm × 25 µm FWHM), polarized valence-band HAXPES has been performed on NiO for voltage application as resistive random access memory to demonstrate the micro-positioning technique and polarization switching.

Keywords: hard X-ray photoemission; linear dichroism; low-temperature double-axis manipulator; micro-focused X-rays; phase retarder; sample monitoring system; strongly correlated electron systems.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't