Gold: Rewriting text book knowledge

Gold was found to exhibit topological surface states. B.Yan/MPI CPfS

These Shockley surface states can be reinterpreted as topologically derived surface states comparable with the robust surface state of a topological insulator, a recently discovered new quantum state. This new quantum state has caused a lot of excitement in the condensed matter community ranging from physics, materials science to chemistry.

However, no application of topological materials has been realized up to now. Gold and platinum, metals with the topological Shockley surface states, are used as standards in surface science and are also established materials for catalysis. Gold surfaces states are commonly employed to benchmark the capability of photoemission spectroscopy and scanning tunneling spectroscopy.

In a recent study on gold surface states, solid state chemistry research at the Max Planck Institute Chemical Physics of Solids in Dresden, with Binghai Yan co-affiliated at ShanghaiTech University, was combined with surface physics research of the University Kaiserslautern (department of Physics and State Research center OPTIMAS).

To prove a new theoretical prediction by Binghai Yan and the Dresden team, the Kaiserslautern team has used a unique photoemission technique, momentum-resolved two-photon photoemission, which allows us to measure the electronic structure in momentum space both below and above the Fermi energy. By combining an optical parametric oscillator laser system with a modern momentum microscope, it was feasible to map the dispersion of the surface states and to confirm experimentally their topological nature.

The discovery not only opens a pathway to new quantum materials, it will also initiate a discussion about the role of topological surfaces states in surface-related processes, such as adsorption and catalysis. Binghai Yan comments “I am fully convinced that the robust surface state in topological materials should positively influence catalysis. We will use this concept to search for new and sustainable materials than noble metals! ”

The work was published in Nature Communication online on Dec. 14th:
Topological States on the Gold Surface,
Binghai Yan, Benjamin Stadtmüller, Norman Haag, Sebastian Jakobs, Johannes Seidel, Dominik Jungkenn, Stefan Mathias, Mirko Cinchetti, Martin Aeschlimann and Claudia Felser, Nature Communication 6 (2015) 10167 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10167 and preprint arXiv:1504.01971

http://www.cpfs.mpg.de Prof. Dr. C. Felser, Dr. B. Yan
https://optimas.uni-kl.de Prof. Dr. M. Aeschlimann, Dr. I. Sattler
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2015/151214/ncomms10167/full/ncomms10167.html

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Ingrid Rothe Max-Planck-Institut für Chemische Physik fester Stoffe

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