Cerium-doped manganite thin films were grown epitaxially by pulsed laser
deposition at 720∘C and oxygen pressure pO2=1−25Pa and were
subjected to different annealing steps. According to x-ray diffraction (XRD)
data, the formation of CeO2 as a secondary phase could be avoided for
pO2≥8Pa. However, transmission electron microscopy shows the presence
of CeO2 nanoclusters, even in those films which appear to be single phase in
XRD. With O2 annealing, the metal-to-insulator transition temperature
increases, while the saturation magnetization decreases and stays well below
the theoretical value for electron-doped La0.7Ce0.3MnO3 with mixed
Mn3+/Mn2+ valences. The same trend is observed with decreasing film
thickness from 100 to 20 nm, indicating a higher oxygen content for thinner
films. Hall measurements on a film which shows a metal-to-insulator transition
clearly reveal holes as dominating charge carriers. Combining data from x-ray
photoemission spectroscopy, for determination of the oxygen content, and x-ray
absorption spectroscopy (XAS), for determination of the hole concentration and
cation valences, we find that with increasing oxygen content the hole
concentration increases and Mn valences are shifted from 2+ to 4+. The
dominating Mn valences in the films are Mn3+ and Mn4+, and only a
small amount of Mn2+ ions can be observed by XAS. Mn2+ and Ce4+
XAS signals obtained in surface-sensitive total electron yield mode are
strongly reduced in the bulk-sensitive fluorescence mode, which indicates
hole-doping in the bulk for those films which do show a metal-to-insulator
transition.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure