185 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Origin of charge density at LaAlO3-on-SrTiO3 heterointerfacespossibility of intrinsic doping
As discovered by Ohtomo et al., a large sheet charge density with high mobility exists at the interface between SrTiO{sub 3} and LaAlO{sub 3}. Based on transport, spectroscopic and oxygen-annealing experiments, we conclude that extrinsic defects in the form of oxygen vacancies introduced by the pulsed laser deposition process used by all researchers to date to make these samples is the source of the large carrier densities. Annealing experiments show a limiting carrier density. We also present a model that explains the high mobility based on carrier redistribution due to an increased dielectric constant
Recommended from our members
Dependence of Electronic Structure of SrRuO3 and the Degree of Correlation on Cation Off-Stoichiometry
We have grown and studied high quality SrRuO{sub 3} films grown by MBE as well as PLD. By changing the oxygen activity during deposition we were able to make SrRuO{sub 3} samples that were stoichiometric (low oxygen activity) or with ruthenium vacancies (high oxygen activity). Samples with strontium vacancies were found impossible to produce since the ruthenium would precipitate out as RuO{sub 2}. The volume of the unit cell of SrRuO{sub 3} becomes larger as more ruthenium vacancies are introduced. The residual resistivity ratio (RRR) and room temperature resistivity were found to systematically depend on the volume of the unit cell and therefore on the amount of ruthenium vacancies. The RRR varied from {approx}30 for stoichiometric samples to less than two for samples that were very ruthenium poor. The room temperature resistivity varied from 190 {micro}{Omega} cm for stoichoimetric samples to over 300 {micro}{Omega} cm for very ruthenium poor samples. UPS spectra show a shift of weight from the coherent peak to the incoherent peak around the Fermi level when samples have more ruthenium vacancies. Core level XPS spectra of the ruthenium 3d lines show a strong screened part in the case of stoichiometric samples. This screened part disappears when ruthenium vacancies are introduced. Both the UPS and the XPS results are consistent with the view that correlation increases as the amount of ruthenium vacancies increase
Preparation and properties of amorphous MgB/MgO superstructures: A new model disordered superconductor
In this paper we introduce a novel method for fabricating MgB/MgO
multilayers and demonstrate the potential for using them as a new model for
disordered superconductors. In this approach we control the annealing of the
MgB to yield an interesting new class of disordered (amorphous)
superconductors with relatively high transition temperatures. The multilayers
appear to exhibit quasi-two-dimensional superconductivity with controlled
anisotropy. We discuss the properties of the multilayers as the thickness of
the components of the bilayers vary.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Understanding the nature of electronic effective mass in double-doped SrTiO
We present an approach to tune the effective mass in an oxide semiconductor
by a double doping mechanism. We demonstrate this in a model oxide system
SrLaTiO, where we can tune the effective mass ranging
from 6--20 as a function of filling or carrier concentration and
the scattering mechanism, which are dependent on the chosen lanthanum and
oxygen vacancy concentrations. The effective mass values were calculated from
the Boltzmann transport equation using the measured transport properties of
thin films of SrLaTiO. Our method, which shows that
the effective mass decreases with carrier concentration, provides a means for
understanding the nature of transport processes in oxides, which typically have
large effective mass and low electron mobility, contrary to the tradional high
mobility semiconductors.Comment: 5 pages with 4 figure
Critical thickness for itinerant ferromagnetism in ultrathin films of SrRuO
Ultrathin films of the itinerant ferromagnet SrRuO were studied using
transport and magnto-optic polar Kerr effect. We find that below 4 monolayers
the films become insulating and their magnetic character changes as they loose
their simple ferromagnetic behavior. We observe a strong reduction in the
magnetic moment which for 3 monolayers and below lies in the plane of the film.
Exchange-bias behavior is observed below the critical thickness, and may point
to induced antiferromagnetism in contact with ferromagnetic regions.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Determination of the spin-flip time in ferromagnetic SrRuO3 from time-resolved Kerr measurements
We report time-resolved Kerr effect measurements of magnetization dynamics in
ferromagnetic SrRuO3. We observe that the demagnetization time slows
substantially at temperatures within 15K of the Curie temperature, which is ~
150K. We analyze the data with a phenomenological model that relates the
demagnetization time to the spin flip time. In agreement with our observations
the model yields a demagnetization time that is inversely proportional to T-Tc.
We also make a direct comparison of the spin flip rate and the Gilbert damping
coefficient showing that their ratio very close to kBTc, indicating a common
origin for these phenomena
Macrocephaly in an 8-month-old infant
An 8-month-old infant presents with macrocephaly and a mild motoric deficit. The pediatrician asks a complementary MR examination to exclude hydrocephalus
- …