ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Interface engineering is an extremely useful tool for systematically investigating materials and the various ways materials interact with each other. We describe different interface engineering strategies designed to reveal the origin of the electric and magnetic dead-layer at La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 interfaces. La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 is a key example of a strongly correlated peroskite oxide material in which a subtle balance of competing interactions gives rise to a ferromagnetic metallic groundstate. This balance, however, is easily disrupted at interfaces. We systematically vary the dopant profile, the disorder and the oxygen octahedra rotations at the interface to investigate which mechanism is responsible for the dead layer. We find that the magnetic dead layer can be completely eliminated by compositional interface engineering such that the polar discontinuity at the interface is removed. This, however, leaves the electrical dead-layer largely intact. We find that deformations in the oxygen octahedra network at the interface are the dominant cause for the electrical dead layer.
Using spin polarized neutron reflectivity experiments, we demonstrate an unusual proximity behaviour when the superconductor (SC) and the ferromagnet (FM) are coupled through an insulator (I) in YBa2Cu3O7-{delta} (SC)/SrTiO3 (I)/La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 (FM)
We have investigated the dimensionality and origin of the magnetotransport properties of LaAlO3 films epitaxially grown on TiO2-terminated SrTiO3(001) substrates. High mobility conduction is observed at low deposition oxygen pressures (PO2 < 10^-5 mb
At the interface between complex insulating oxides, novel phases with interesting properties may occur, such as the metallic state reported in the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 system. While this state has been predicted and reported to be confined at the interface,
Electrical field and light-illumination have been two most widely used stimuli in tuning the conductivity of semiconductor devices. Via capacitive effect electrical field modifies the carrier density of the devices, while light-illumination generates
The synthesis of materials with well-controlled composition and structure improves our understanding of their intrinsic electrical transport properties. Recent developments in atomically controlled growth have been shown to be crucial in enabling the