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In semiconducting materials, electrostatic gating and light illumination are widely used stimuli to tune the electronic properties of the system. Here, we show a significant enhancement of photoresponse at the conducting interface of LaVO3-SrTiO3 under the simultaneous application of light and negative gate bias voltage, in comparison to their individual application. On the other hand, the LaVO3-SrTiO3 interface remains largely insensitive to light illumination, when a positive gate bias voltage is applied. Our X-ray diffractometer, Raman spectroscopy and photoemission measurements show that unlike the LaAlO3-SrTiO3 interface, migration of oxygen vacancies is not the prime mechanism for the enhanced photoresponse. Rather, we suggest that the photoresponse of our system is intrinsic and this intrinsic mechanism is a complex interplay between band filling, electric field at the interface, strong electron interaction due to mottness of LaVO3 and modification of conducting channel width.
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
Understanding and controlling the interfacial magnetic properties of ferromagnetic thin films are crucial for spintronic device applications. However, using conventional magnetometry, it is difficult to detect them separately from the bulk properties
We report on a resonant soft X-ray spectroscopy study of the electronic and magnetic structure of the cuprate-manganite interface. Polarized X-ray spectroscopy measurements taken at the Cu L edge reveal up to a five-fold increase in the dichroic sign
The interface between LaAlO3 and SrTiO3 hosts a two-dimensional electron system of itinerant carriers, although both oxides are band insulators. Interface ferromagnetism coexisting with superconductivity has been found and attributed to local moments
Selective optical excitation of a substrate lattice can drive phase changes across hetero-interfaces. This phenomenon is a non-equilibrium analogue of static strain control in heterostructures and may lead to new applications in optically controlled