40 research outputs found
Growth of Antiperovskite Oxide Ca3SnO Films by Pulsed Laser Deposition
We report the epitaxial growth of Ca3SnO antiperovskite oxide films on
(001)-oriented cubic yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) substrates by using a
conventional pulsed laser deposition (PLD) technique. In this work, a sintered
Ca3SnO pellet is used as the ablation target. X-ray diffraction measurements
demonstrate the (001) growth of Ca3SnO films with the antiperovskite structure
and a cube-on-cube orientation relationship to the YSZ substrate. The
successful synthesis of the antiperovskite phase is further confirmed by x-ray
photoemission spectroscopy. These results strongly suggest that
antiperovskite-oxide films can be directly grown on substrates from the target
material using a PLD technique
Emergence of quantum critical behavior in metallic quantum-well states of strongly correlated oxides
Controlling quantum critical phenomena in strongly correlated electron
systems, which emerge in the neighborhood of a quantum phase transition, is a
major challenge in modern condensed matter physics. Quantum critical phenomena
are generated from the delicate balance between long-range order and its
quantum fluctuation. So far, the nature of quantum phase transitions has been
investigated by changing a limited number of external parameters such as
pressure and magnetic field. We propose a new approach for investigating
quantum criticality by changing the strength of quantum fluctuation that is
controlled by the dimensional crossover in metallic quantum well (QW)
structures of strongly correlated oxides. With reducing layer thickness to the
critical thickness of metal-insulator transition, crossover from a Fermi liquid
to a non-Fermi liquid has clearly been observed in the metallic QW of SrVO
by \textit{in situ} angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. Non-Fermi liquid
behavior with the critical exponent is found to emerge in the
two-dimensional limit of the metallic QW states, indicating that a quantum
critical point exists in the neighborhood of the thickness-dependent Mott
transition. These results suggest that artificial QW structures provide a
unique platform for investigating novel quantum phenomena in strongly
correlated oxides in a controllable fashion.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure