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Nanoscale Suppression of Magnetization at Atomically Assembled Manganite Interfaces
Using polarized X-rays, we compare the electronic and magnetic properties of
a La(2/3)Sr(1/3)MnO(3)(LSMO)/SrTiO(3)(STO) and a modified
LSMO/LaMnO(3)(LMO)/STO interface. Using the technique of X-ray resonant
magnetic scattering (XRMS), we can probe the interfaces of complicated layered
structures and quantitatively model depth-dependent magnetic profiles as a
function of distance from the interface. Comparisons of the average electronic
and magnetic properties at the interface are made independently using X-ray
absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD). The
XAS and the XMCD demonstrate that the electronic and magnetic structure of the
LMO layer at the modified interface is qualitatively equivalent to the
underlying LSMO film. From the temperature dependence of the XMCD, it is found
that the near surface magnetization for both interfaces falls off faster than
the bulk. For all temperatures in the range of 50K - 300K, the magnetic
profiles for both systems always show a ferromagnetic component at the
interface with a significantly suppressed magnetization that evolves to the
bulk value over a length scale of ~1.6 - 2.4 nm. The LSMO/LMO/STO interface
shows a larger ferromagnetic (FM) moment than the LSMO/STO interface, however
the difference is only substantial at low temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Electrostatic interface tuning in correlated superconducting heterostructures
An electrostatic field, which is applied to a gated high-temperature
superconducting (HTSC) film, is believed to affect the film similar to charge
doping. Analyzing the pairing in terms of a t-J model, we show that a coupling
to electric dipoles and phonons at the interface of film and dielectric gate
localizes the injected charge and leads to a superconductor-insulator
transition. This results in a dramatic modification of the doping dependent
phase diagram close to and above the optimal doping which is expected to shed
light on recent electric field-effect experiments with HTSC cuprates.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Interface hole-doping in cuprate-titanate superlattices
The electronic structure of interfaces between YBaCuO and
SrTiO is studied using local spin density approximation (LSDA) with
intra-atomic Coulomb repulsion (LSDA+U). We find a metallic state in
cuprate/titanate heterostructures with the hole carriers concentrated
substantially in the CuO-layers and in the first interface TiO and SrO
planes. This effective interface doping appears due to the polarity of
interfaces, caused by the first incomplete copper oxide unit cell.
Interface-induced high pre-doping of CuO-layers is a key mechanism
controlling the superconducting properties in engineered field-effect devices
realized on the basis of cuprate/titanate superlattices.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Suppressed Magnetization at the Surfaces and Interfaces of Ferromagnetic Metallic Manganites
What happens to ferromagnetism at the surfaces and interfaces of manganites?
With the competition between charge, spin, and orbital degrees of freedom, it
is not surprising that the surface behavior may be profoundly different than
that of the bulk. Using a powerful combination of two surface probes, tunneling
and polarized x-ray interactions, this paper reviews our work on the nature of
the electronic and magnetic states at manganite surfaces and interfaces. The
general observation is that ferromagnetism is not the lowest energy state at
the surface or interface, which results in a suppression or even loss of
ferromagnetic order at the surface. Two cases will be discussed ranging from
the surface of the quasi-2D bilayer manganite
(LaSrMnO) to the 3D Perovskite
(LaSrMnO)/SrTiO interface. For the bilayer manganite,
that is, ferromagnetic and conducting in the bulk, these probes present clear
evidence for an intrinsic insulating non-ferromagnetic surface layer atop
adjacent subsurface layers that display the full bulk magnetization. This
abrupt intrinsic magnetic interface is attributed to the weak inter-bilayer
coupling native to these quasi-two-dimensional materials. This is in marked
contrast to the non-layered manganite system
(LaSrMnO/SrTiO), whose magnetization near the interface
is less than half the bulk value at low temperatures and decreases with
increasing temperature at a faster rate than the bulk.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
Reduced leakage current in Josephson tunnel junctions with codeposited barriers
Josephson junctions were fabricated using two different methods of barrier
formation. The trilayers employed were Nb/Al-AlOx/Nb on sapphire, where the
first two layers were epitaxial. The oxide barrier was formed either by
exposing the Al surface to O2 or by codepositing Al in an O2 background. The
codeposition process yielded junctions that showed the theoretically predicted
subgap current and no measurable shunt conductance. In contrast, devices with
barriers formed by thermal oxidation showed a small shunt conductance in
addition to the predicted subgap current.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Broken particle-hole symmetry at atomically flat a-axis YBa2Cu3O7-d interfaces
We have studied quasiparticle tunneling into atomically flat a-axis films of
YBa2Cu3O7-d and DyBa2Cu3O7-d through epitaxial CaTiO3 barriers. The junction
heterostructures were grown by oxide molecular beam epitaxy and were carefully
optimized using in-situ monitoring techniques, resulting in unprecedented
crystalline perfection of the superconductor/insulator interface. Below Tc, the
tunneling conductance shows the evolution of a large unexpected asymmetrical
feature near zero bias. This is evidence that superconducting YBCO crystals,
atomically truncated along the lobe direction with a titanate layer, have
intrinsically broken particle-hole symmetry over macroscopically large areas.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures; v2 includes minor changes in concluding
paragraph to match PRL versio
Transmission Electron Study of Heteroepitaxial Growth in the BiSrCaCuO System
Films of BiSrCaCuO and BiSrCuO have been grown using Atomic-Layer-by-Layer Molecular Beam
Epitaxy (ALL-MBE) on lattice-matched substrates. These materials have been
combined with layers of closely-related metastable compounds like BiSrCaCuO (2278) and rare-earth-doped
compounds like BiSrDyCaCuO
(Dy:2212) to form heterostructures with unique superconducting properties,
including superconductor/insulator multilayers and tunnel junctions.
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has been used to study the morphology
and microstructure of these heterostructures. These TEM studies shed light on
the physical properties of the films, and give insight into the growth mode of
highly anisotropic solids like BiSrCaCuO.Comment: 17 pages, submitted to J. Materials Research. Email to
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