Interfacial electron-phonon coupling and quantum confinement in ultrathin Yb films on graphite

2021 
Interfacial electron-phonon coupling in ultrathin films has attracted much interest recently. Here, by combining angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy, we report quantized electronic states and strong interfacial electron-phonon coupling in ultrathin Yb films on graphite. We observed clear kinks in the energy-momentum dispersion of quantum well states, and the kink positions agree well with the energies of optical phonons of graphite. The extracted coupling strength $\ensuremath{\lambda}$ is largest for the thinnest film with a preferred (``magic'') thickness of four monolayers and exhibits a strong band dependence, which can be qualitatively accounted for by a simple model. The interfacial electron-phonon coupling also gives rise to characteristic steplike structures in the $dI/dV$ spectra, implying dominant coupling with the phonons with zero in-plane momentum. A Lifshitz transition occurs at higher coverage, where quantum well states derived mainly from $5d$ electrons dominate near the Fermi level and possess large effective mass (up to $\ensuremath{\sim}19\phantom{\rule{0.28em}{0ex}}{m}_{e}$). Our results highlight the potentially important role of interfacial electron-phonon interaction for ultrathin films and provide spectroscopic insight to understand this cross-interface fermion-boson interaction.
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