571 research outputs found
Dramatic Mobility Enhancements in Doped SrTiO3 Thin Films by Defect Management
We report bulk-quality n-type SrTiO3 (n-SrTiO3) thin films fabricated by
pulsed laser deposition, with electron mobility as high as 6600 cm2 V-1 s-1 at
2 K and carrier density as low as 2.0 x 10^18cm-3 (~ 0.02 at. %), far exceeding
previous pulsed laser deposition films. This result stems from precise
strontium and oxygen vacancy defect chemistry management, providing a general
approach for defect control in complex oxide heteroepitaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Polarization dependent Landau level crossing in a two-dimensional electron system in MgZnO/ZnO-heterostructure
We report electrical transport measurements in a tilted magnetic field on a
high-mobility two-dimensional electron system confined at the MgZnO/ZnO
heterointerface. The observation of multiple crossing events of spin-resolved
Landau levels (LLs) enables the mapping of the sequence of electronic states.
We further measure the renormalization of electron spin susceptibility at zero
field and the susceptibility dependence on the electron spin polarization. The
latter manifests the deviation from the Pauli spin susceptibility. As the
result, the crossing of spin-resolved LLs shifts to smaller tilt angles and the
first Landau level coincidence event is absent even when the magnetic field has
only a perpendicular component to the 2DES plane.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Temperature Dependent Polarity Reversal in Au/Nb:SrTiO3 Schottky Junctions
We have observed temperature-dependent reversal of the rectifying polarity in
Au/Nb:SrTiO3 Schottky junctions. By simulating current-voltage characteristics
we have found that the permittivity of SrTiO3 near the interface exhibits
temperature dependence opposite to that observed in the bulk, significantly
reducing the barrier width. At low temperature, tunneling current dominates the
junction transport due both to such barrier narrowing and to suppressed thermal
excitations. The present results demonstrate that novel junction properties can
be induced by the interface permittivity
Fermi surface and superconductivity in low-density high-mobility {\delta}-doped SrTiO3
The electronic structure of low-density n-type SrTiO3 delta-doped
heterostructures is investigated by angular dependent Shubnikov-de Haas
oscillations. In addition to a controllable crossover from a three- to
two-dimensional Fermi surface, clear beating patterns for decreasing dopant
layer thicknesses are found. These indicate the lifting of the degeneracy of
the conduction band due to subband quantization in the two-dimensional limit.
Analysis of the temperature-dependent oscillations shows that similar effective
masses are found for all components, associated with the splitting of the light
electron pocket. The dimensionality crossover in the superconducting state is
found to be distinct from the normal state, resulting in a rich phase diagram
as a function of dopant layer thickness.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted for publicatio
Dominant mobility modulation by the electric field effect at the LaAlO_3 / SrTiO_3 interface
Caviglia et al. [Nature (London) 456, 624 (2008)] have found that the
superconducting LaAlO_3 / SrTiO_3 interface can be gate modulated. A central
issue is to determine the principal effect of the applied electric field. Using
magnetotransport studies of a gated structure, we find that the mobility
variation is almost five times as large as the sheet carrier density.
Furthermore, superconductivity can be suppressed at both positive and negative
gate bias. These results indicate that the relative disorder strength strongly
increases across the superconductor-insulator transition.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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