947 research outputs found
Controlling Electro-Magnetic Functionality of Ruthenates by Heterostructure Design
Perovskite oxides (ABO3) show wide range of functionalities originating from interplay of structural, spin, charge, and orbital degrees of freedoms. The bulk perovskite structure could be controlled via conventional chemical substitution, though exploiting heterostructure engineering novel ground states could be observed which otherwise are absent in bulk. In this thesis, the interest is to explore the electro-magnetic phenomena as complex oxides are confined in heterostructures.
I first investigate electromagnetic properties of ultrathin epitaxial ruthenate: SrRuO3 (SRO); spatially confined between SrTiO3 (STO) i.e., STO5-SROn-STO5 with n = 1- and 2-unit cells. It is shown that STO5-SRO2-STO5 heterostructure is nearly stoichiometric, metallic, and ferromagnetic with TC ~ 128 K, even though it lacks characteristic bulk-SRO octahedral tilts. In contrast, STO5-SRO1-STO5 is accompanied by a loss of metallicity and ferromagnetism, though octahedron remains non-tilted. However, STO5-SRO1-STO5 exhibits a substantial interface induced Ti-Ru intermixture, which is responsible for the loss of metallicity and ferromagnetism. The results highlight role of B-site non-stoichiometry and interface-induced intermixture.
Next, we report the emergent electro-magnetic properties in ultrathin CaRuO3 films by unique “d-doping” engineering i.e., atomically replacing A-site with single SrO layer, though keeping identical B-site (Ru). While bulk CaRuO3 is metallic and nonmagnetic, the films confined to thickness of ~15-unit cells (u.c.) are insulating and remain nonmagnetic. However, d-doping of SrO to middle of CaRuO3 films induces an insulator-to-metal transition and unusual ferromagnetism, while retaining bulk-orthorhombicity. Through, atomically resolved structural analysis, density-functional-theory calculations as well as transport and magneto-transport, we find that emergent magnetic ordering is coupled to subtle electronic and structural effects introduced via A-site cation.
To further investigate effect of A-site on ruthenates functionalities, we employ heterostructure engineering to stabilize Sr1-xBaxRuO3 (0 \u3c x \u3c 0.7) films. The strain-stabilized Ba substitution transmutes lattice symmetry from bulk-like orthorhombic (x = 0) to cubic phase (x = 0.2) without RuO6 rotations. The cubical film exhibits robust ferromagnetic ordering (Tc = 145 K) with a strong perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Though, increased Ba-substitution significantly condenses the ferromagnetism, suggesting that besides determining octahedral distortion, the A-site introduces certain entangled electro-magnetic effects that greatly affect the ruthenates magnetic ordering
Separation Framework: An Enabler for Cooperative and D2D Communication for Future 5G Networks
Soaring capacity and coverage demands dictate that future cellular networks
need to soon migrate towards ultra-dense networks. However, network
densification comes with a host of challenges that include compromised energy
efficiency, complex interference management, cumbersome mobility management,
burdensome signaling overheads and higher backhaul costs. Interestingly, most
of the problems, that beleaguer network densification, stem from legacy
networks' one common feature i.e., tight coupling between the control and data
planes regardless of their degree of heterogeneity and cell density.
Consequently, in wake of 5G, control and data planes separation architecture
(SARC) has recently been conceived as a promising paradigm that has potential
to address most of aforementioned challenges. In this article, we review
various proposals that have been presented in literature so far to enable SARC.
More specifically, we analyze how and to what degree various SARC proposals
address the four main challenges in network densification namely: energy
efficiency, system level capacity maximization, interference management and
mobility management. We then focus on two salient features of future cellular
networks that have not yet been adapted in legacy networks at wide scale and
thus remain a hallmark of 5G, i.e., coordinated multipoint (CoMP), and
device-to-device (D2D) communications. After providing necessary background on
CoMP and D2D, we analyze how SARC can particularly act as a major enabler for
CoMP and D2D in context of 5G. This article thus serves as both a tutorial as
well as an up to date survey on SARC, CoMP and D2D. Most importantly, the
article provides an extensive outlook of challenges and opportunities that lie
at the crossroads of these three mutually entangled emerging technologies.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials 201
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