Defect engineering in oxide heterostructures by enhanced oxygen surface exchange

Authors
  • M Huijben
  • G. Koster
  • M.K. Kruize
  • S. Wenderich
  • J. Verbeeck
  • S. Bals
  • E. Slooten
  • B. Shi
  • H.J.A. Molegraaf
  • J.E. Kleibeuker
  • S. van Aert
  • J.B. Goedkoop
  • A. Brinkman
  • D.H.A. Blank
  • M.S. Golden
  • G. van Tendeloo
  • H. Hilgenkamp
  • G. Rijnders
Publication date 2013
Journal Advanced Functional Materials
Volume | Issue number 23 | 42
Pages (from-to) 5240-5248
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute (WZI)
Abstract
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 study of new physical phenomena in epitaxial oxide heterostructures. Nevertheless, these phenomena can be influenced by the presence of defects that act as extrinsic sources of both doping and impurity scattering. Control over the nature and density of such defects is therefore necessary to fully understand the intrinsic materials properties and exploit them in future device technologies. Here, it is shown that incorporation of a strontium copper oxide nano-layer strongly reduces the impurity scattering at conducting interfaces in oxide LaAlO3-SrTiO3(001) heterostructures, opening the door to high carrier mobility materials. It is proposed that this remote cuprate layer facilitates enhanced suppression of oxygen defects by reducing the kinetic barrier for oxygen exchange in the hetero-interfacial film system. This design concept of controlled defect engineering can be of significant importance in applications in which enhanced oxygen surface exchange plays a crucial role.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201203355
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