18 research outputs found

    Giant Oscillating Thermopower at Oxide Interfaces

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    Understanding the nature of charge carriers at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface is one of the major open issues in the full comprehension of the charge confinement phenomenon in oxide heterostructures. Here, we investigate thermopower to study the electronic structure in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 at low temperature as a function of gate field. In particular, under large negative gate voltage, corresponding to the strongly depleted charge density regime, thermopower displays record-high negative values of the order of 10^4 - 10^5 microV/K, oscillating at regular intervals as a function of the gate voltage. The huge thermopower magnitude can be attributed to the phonon-drag contribution, while the oscillations map the progressive depletion and the Fermi level descent across a dense array of localized states lying at the bottom of the Ti 3d conduction band. This study is the first direct evidence of a localized Anderson tail in the two-dimensional (2D) electron liquid at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface.Comment: Main text: 28 pages and 3 figures; Supplementary information: 29 pages, 5 figures and 1 tabl

    Study of equilibrium carrier transfer in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 from an epitaxial La1 12x Sr x MnO3 ferromagnetic layer

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    Using x-ray magnetic circular dichroism and ab-initio calculations, we explore the La1-xSrxMnO3/LaAlO3/SrTiO3 (001) heterostructure as a mean to induce transfer of spin polarized carriers from ferromagnetic La1-xSrxMnO3 layer into the 2DEG (two-dimensional electron gas) at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface. By out-of-plane transport measurements, the tunneling across the LaAlO3 barrier is also analyzed. Our results suggest small or vanishing spin-polarization for the 2DEG: magnetic dichroism does not reveal a neat signal on Ti atoms, while calculations predict, for the pristine stoichiometric interface, a small spin-resolved mobile charge of 2.5 x 10(13) cm(-2) corresponding to a magnetic moment of 0.038 mu(B) per Ti atom, tightly confined within the single SrTiO3 layer adjacent to LaAlO3. Such a small magnetization is hard to be detected experimentally and perhaps not robust enough to survive to structural disorder, native doping, or La1-xSrxMnO3 dead-layer effects. Our analysis suggests that, while some spin-diffusion cannot be completely ruled out, the use of ferromagnetic La1-xSrxMnO3 epilayers grown on-top of LaAlO3/SrTiO3 is not effective enough to induce robust spin-transport properties in the 2DEG. The examined heterostructure is nevertheless an excellent test-case to understand some fundamental aspects of the spin-polarized charge transfer in 2D wells

    Thermal Scanning-Probe Lithography for Broad-Band On-Demand Plasmonic Nanostructures on Transparent Substrates

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    Thermal scanning-probe lithography (t-SPL) is a high-resolution nanolithography technique that enables the nanopatterning of thermosensitive materials by means of a heated silicon tip. It does not require alignment markers and gives the possibility to assess the morphology of the sample in a noninvasive way before, during, and after the patterning. In order to exploit t-SPL at its peak performances, the writing process requires applying an electric bias between the scanning hot tip and the sample, thereby restricting its application to conductive, optically opaque, substrates. In this work, we show a t-SPL-based method, enabling the noninvasive high-resolution nanolithography of photonic nanostructures onto optically transparent substrates across a broad-band visible and near-infrared spectral range. This was possible by intercalating an ultrathin transparent conductive oxide film between the dielectric substrate and the sacrificial patterning layer. This way, nanolithography performances comparable with those typically observed on conventional semiconductor substrates are achieved without significant changes of the optical response of the final sample. We validated this innovative nanolithography approach by engineering periodic arrays of plasmonic nanoantennas and showing the capability to tune their plasmonic response over a broad-band visible and near-infrared spectral range. The optical properties of the obtained systems make them promising candidates for the fabrication of hybrid plasmonic metasurfaces supported onto fragile low-dimensional materials, thus enabling a variety of applications in nanophotonics, sensing, and thermoplasmonics
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