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Internal friction in oxide thin films imposes a critical limitation to the sensitivity and stability of ultra-high finesse optical cavities for gravitational wave detectors. Strategies like doping or creating nanolaminates are sought to introduce structural modifications that reduce internal friction. This work describes an investigation of the morphological changes SiO2/Ta2O5 and TiO2/Ta2O5 nanolaminates undergo with annealing and their impact on room temperature internal friction. It is demonstrated that thermal treatment results in a reduction of internal friction in both nanolaminates, but through different pathways. In the SiO2/Ta2O5 nanolaminate, which layers remain intact after annealing, the total reduction in internal friction follows the reduction in the composing SiO2 and Ta2O5 layers. Instead, interdiffusion initiated by annealing at the interface of the TiO2/Ta2O5 nanolaminate and the formation of a mixed phase dictate a more significant reduction in internal friction to ~ 2.6 * 10-4, a value lower than any other Ta2O5 mixture coating with similar cation concentration.
Multiferroic materials, in which ferroelectric and magnetic ordering coexist, are of fundamental interest for the development of multi-state memory devices that allow for electrical writing and non-destructive magnetic read-out operation. The great c
In the recent years graphitization of ion-beam induced amorphous layers became the basic tool for device fabrication in diamond. The etchable graphitic layers can be removed to form free-standing membranes into which the desired structures can be scu
Electric polarization loops are measured at room temperature on highly pure BiFeO3 single crystals synthesized by a flux growth method. Because the crystals have a high electrical resistivity, the resulting low leakage currents allow us to measure a
We report annealing induced exchange bias in Fe-Cu-Pt based heterostructures with Cu as an intermediate layer (Fe/Cu/Pt heterostructure) and capping layer (Fe/Pt/Cu heterostructure). Exchange bias observed at room temperature (300 K) is found to be d
Two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) formed at the interface between SrTiO3 (STO) and LaAlO3 (LAO) insulating layer is supposed to possess strong Rashba spin-orbit coupling. To date, the inverse Edelstein effect (i.e. spin-to-charge conversion) in the