The comprehension of the electronic band structure of solids is applied in many fields of condensed matter physics, contributing to the microscopic understanding of many phenomenological trends and guiding the interpretation of experimental spectra in photoemission, optics, inelastic neutron scattering, specific heat, among others, including the effect of spin-polarisation. Most modern band electronic structure theoretical methods employ
density functional theory to solve the full many-body
Schrödinger equation for electrons in a solid. The consolidated experimental and theoretical approach to describe the electronic structure of solids allows the straightforward visualization of the difference between
conductors,
insulators, and
semiconductors according to the presence of permitted and forbidden electronic states of particular energy and momentum, which can be calculated by quantum mechanics and measured using ARPES. The ARPES technique has the unique ability to determine the band structure directly. It thus helps understand the degree and type of electron interaction in the solids, corroborating or contesting band electronic structure results calculated using different theoretical approaches. However, this technique's lateral resolution, manipulation, and orientation of submicrometric of heterogeneous samples are rather limited. That is because the electrons measured in ARPES are all those electrons ejected by the photo-absorption process prompted by the incident photons. If the illuminated area of the sample is large enough to cover nonhomogeneous areas, the detected ejected electrons are the sum up of all the photoelectrons emitted by all different illuminated patches. If each area has a distinctive electronic band structure, the ARPES spectra will show the average of all of them weighted according to the size of each different patch present in the illuminated area. In fact, many complex materials are constituted by disoriented small monocrystals or composed of several nanometric monocrystals. Traditional ARPES can only provide their average electronic structure if the patch size is smaller than the spot size of the ARPES setup, typically 200 um. This limitation is also present in samples with micrometric and submicrometric zones with distinctive chemical composition due to undesired side chemical reactions, for example, originating by the contamination or oxidation of the primitive sample. Hence, being the spot size of the monochromatic photon beam typically over 200 ųm side for conventional ARPES, only homogeneous samples with this size or bigger can be studied. Consequently, a sub-micrometric lateral resolution should be added to ARPES to perform the experimental determination of the electronic structure of small crystalline materials and large samples with heterogeneities. Nano-ARPES has implemented this lateral discrimination by focalising the size of the photon incident beam within the nanometric scale. Similarly to ARPES, the electronic band structure of nanomaterials can be directly measured using Nano-ARPES by measuring the ejected electrons' kinetic energy, velocity, and absolute momentum. The photon beam focusing to a spot size down to nanometric scale has been routinely achieved in a few well-known X-ray-based methods, such as scanning transmission X-ray microscopy
(STXM) and scanning photoemission microscopy (SPEM). However, these techniques are much less demanding because they typically use incident photon energies higher than 150 eV and require non-angle resolved measurements, only recording integrated signals proportional to the X-Ray absorption coefficient and core-level photoelectrons, respectively. In both cases, the
Fresnel Zone Plates
(FZPs) performance is the essential component determining the lateral resolution, varying from micro- to nanometric lateral resolution. Nowadays, several companies in the market provide FZPs with a resolution better than 30 nm, which has facilitated the construction and operation of several x-Ray based microscopes such as STXM and SPEM instruments in different
synchrotron radiation facilities like
Elettra,
ALS, CLS, and MAX-lab, among others. Nano-ARPES technique, however, requires much lower incident photon energy, typically from 6 eV to 100 eV) to detect those photoelectrons emitted by the electronic states below and close to the Fermi level, which cross-section increases as the incident photon energy decreases. An alternative k-space imaging approach is based on energy-filtered
photoemission microscopes (PEEMs). The lateral resolution is achieved using an electron optical column instead of focalizing the incident photon beam. This full-field k-space version of PEEM is available commercially. However, for this commercially available full-field PEEM version with k-space imaging, achieving high energy and momentum resolution is challenging. ==Instrumentation==