2000
DOI: 10.1126/science.288.5470.1399
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Dimensionality Effects in the Lifetime of Surface States

Abstract: A long-standing discrepancy between experimental and theoretical values for the lifetimes of holes in the surface-state electron bands on noble metal surfaces is resolved; previous determinations of both are found to have been in error. The ability of the scanning tunneling microscope to verify surface quality before taking spectroscopic measurements is used to remove the effects of defect scattering on experimental lifetimes, found to have been a significant contribution to prior determinations. A theoretical… Show more

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Cited by 314 publications
(254 citation statements)
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“…We also note from this figure that a large contribution from intraband transitions, strongly screened by the underlying 3D bulk electron system, is responsible for the large differences between the 3D free-electron gas prediction and the experimental results (represented by open triangles), as discussed in Ref. [52]. Calculations based on a pure 2D electron-gas model to describe the surface state give results that are much larger than the model-potential intraband contribution to the decay rate by factors of $7 for the state at the G point in Cu (1 1 1) and by a factor of $2.5 in Be(0 0 0 1).…”
Section: Electron-electron Contribution To the Decaymentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…We also note from this figure that a large contribution from intraband transitions, strongly screened by the underlying 3D bulk electron system, is responsible for the large differences between the 3D free-electron gas prediction and the experimental results (represented by open triangles), as discussed in Ref. [52]. Calculations based on a pure 2D electron-gas model to describe the surface state give results that are much larger than the model-potential intraband contribution to the decay rate by factors of $7 for the state at the G point in Cu (1 1 1) and by a factor of $2.5 in Be(0 0 0 1).…”
Section: Electron-electron Contribution To the Decaymentioning
confidence: 91%
“…This assumption is valid for image-potential states since their wave functions lie mainly at the vacuum side of the surface and the electron moves, therefore, in a region with little potential variation in a plane parallel to the surface. Moreover, this assumption is still reasonably good for the clear s-p z surface states on clean metal surfaces [52][53][54][55][56] and surfaces covered with alkali-metal adlayers [57], because these states do not show either a strong variation in the direction parallel to the surface region [58][59][60][61][62][63][64][65][66].…”
Section: One-electron Model Potentialmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Recently, it has been further expanded to study spin-split surface states on surface alloys 10 and topological insulators 11,12 . QPI has proven to be a powerful method to analyse electronic properties, such as energy dispersion relations 13 , lifetimes [14][15][16] , scattering phase shifts 1,7 , coherence lengths 9 and scattering channels 10,11,12 . One of the fundamental aspects of the QPI mapping is that in real space the amplitude of the LDOS oscillations reduces as the tip is moved away from the scattering centres.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the fundamental aspects of the QPI mapping is that in real space the amplitude of the LDOS oscillations reduces as the tip is moved away from the scattering centres. In part, this reduction is due to many-body inelastic decay [14][15][16] , since the injected quasiparticle, after a typical lifetime of several femtoseconds 17 (1 fs ¼ 10 À 15 s), eventually relaxes into states closer to the Fermi level E F . In reciprocal space, this finite lifetime results in a broadening of the peaks related to the LDOS oscillation wavevectors in Fourier transformed (FT) QPI maps 18 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%