Abstract

When a crystal becomes thin to the atomic level, peculiar phenomena discretely depending on its layer numbers ($n$) start to appear. Here, we investigate the electronic band dispersions of multilayer ${\mathrm{WTe}}_{2}$ (2--5 layers), by performing laser-based microfocused angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy on exfoliated flakes sorted by $n$. We observe that the holelike valence bands start to cross the Fermi level when the number of layers is increased from 2- to 3 layers, which should be related to the insulator-semimetal transition, as well as the 30--70-meV spin splitting of valence bands manifesting in even $n$ as a signature of stronger structural asymmetry. Our result fully demonstrates the possibility of the large energy-scale band and spin manipulation through the finite-$n$ stacking procedure.

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