3D Dirac cone carrier dynamics in Na3Bi and Cd3As2
Abstract
Optical measurements and band structure calculations are reported on 3D Dirac materials. The electronic properties associated with the Dirac cone are identified in the reflectivity spectra of Cd3As2 and Na3Bi single crystals. In Na3Bi, the plasma edge is found to be strongly temperature dependent due to thermally excited free carriers in the Dirac cone. The thermal behavior provides an estimate of the Fermi level EF=25 meV and the z-axis Fermi velocity vz = 0.3 eV associated with the heavy bismuth Dirac band. At high energies above the -point Lifshitz gap energy, a frequency and temperature independent ε2 indicative of Dirac cone interband transitions translates into an ab-plane Fermi velocity of 3 eV . The observed number of IR phonons rules out the P63/mmc space group symmetry but is consistent with the P3c1 candidate symmetry. A plasmaron excitation is discovered near the plasmon energy that persists over a broad range of temperature. The optical signature of the large joint density of states arising from saddle points at is strongly suppressed in Na3Bi consistent with band structure calculations that show the dipole transition matrix elements to be weak due to the very small s-orbital character of the Dirac bands. In Cd3As2, a distinctive peak in reflectivity due to the logarithmic divergence in ε1 expected at the onset of Dirac cone interband transitions is identified. The center frequency of the peak shifts with temperature quantitatively consistent with a linear dispersion and a carrier density of n=1.3×1017 cm-3. The peak width gives a measure of the Fermi velocity anisotropy of 10\%, indicating a nearly spherical Fermi surface. The lineshape gives an upper bound estimate of 7 meV for the potential fluctuation energy scale.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.