We use first-principles calculations to investigate the stability of bi-axially strained Pnma perovskite CaMnO3 towards the formation of oxygen vacancies. Our motivation is provided by promising indications that novel material properties can be engineered by application of strain through coherent heteroepitaxy in thin films. While it is usually assumed that such epitaxial strain is accommodated primarily by changes in intrinsic lattice constants, point defect formation is also a likely strain relaxation mechanism. This is particularly true at the large strain magnitudes (>4%) which first-principles calculations often suggest are required to induce new functionalities. We find a strong dependence of oxygen vacancy defect formation energy on strain, with tensile strain lowering the formation energy consistent with the increasing molar volume with increasing oxygen deficiency. In addition, we find that strain differentiates the formation energy for different lattice sites, suggesting its use as a route to engineering vacancy ordering in epitaxial thin films.
Oxygen (O2) adsorbed on metal oxides is important in catalytic oxidation reactions, chemical sensing, and photocatalysis. Strong adsorption requires transfer of negative charge from oxygen vacancies (V(O)s) or dopants, for example. With scanning tunneling microscopy, we observed, transformed, and, in conjunction with theory, identified the nature of O2 molecules on the (101) surface of anatase (titanium oxide, TiO2) doped with niobium. V(O)s reside exclusively in the bulk, but we pull them to the surface with a strongly negatively charged scanning tunneling microscope tip. O2 adsorbed as superoxo (O2(-)) at fivefold-coordinated Ti sites was transformed to peroxo (O2(2-)) and, via reaction with a VO, placed into an anion surface lattice site as an (O2)O species. This so-called bridging dimer also formed when O2 directly reacted with V(O)s at or below the surface.
Interplay of spin, charge, orbital and lattice degrees of freedom in oxide heterostructures results in a plethora of fascinating properties, which can be exploited in new generations of electronic devices with enhanced functionalities. The paradigm example is the interface between the two band insulators LaAlO3 and SrTiO3 that hosts a two-dimensional electron system. Apart from the mobile charge carriers, this system exhibits a range of intriguing properties such as field effect, superconductivity and ferromagnetism, whose fundamental origins are still debated. Here we use soft-X-ray angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy to penetrate through the LaAlO3 overlayer and access charge carriers at the buried interface. The experimental spectral function directly identifies the interface charge carriers as large polarons, emerging from coupling of charge and lattice degrees of freedom, and involving two phonons of different energy and thermal activity. This phenomenon fundamentally limits the carrier mobility and explains its puzzling drop at high temperatures.
Local perturbations in complex oxides such as domain walls 1,2 , strain 3,4 and defects 5,6 are of interest because they can modify the conduction or the dielectric and magnetic response and even promote phase transitions. Here we show that the interaction between different types of local perturbations in oxide thin films is an additional source of functionality. Taking SrMnO 3 as a model system, we use nonlinear optics to verify the theoretical prediction that strain induces a polar phase, and density functional theory to show that strain simultaneously increases the concentration of oxygen vacancies. These vacancies couple to the polar domain walls where they establish an electrostatic barrier to electron migration. The result 2 is a state with locally structured room-temperature conductivity consisting of conducting nanosized polar domains encased by insulating domain boundaries, which we resolve using scanning probe microscopy. Our "nanocapacitor" domains can be individually charged, suggesting stable capacitance nanobits with a potential for information storage technology.At first we verify the occurrence of strain-induced polar order in SrMnO 3 thin films.Motivated by the search for novel multiferroic materials, which combine magnetic and ferroelectric orders in the same phase, density functional theory (DFT) predicted the occurrence of ferroelectricity in the perovskite-structure alkaline-earth manganites at larger-than-equilibrium lattice parameters 7,8,9 . For bulk SrMnO 3 this prediction was confirmed by partial substitution of Sr by Ba which induces negative chemical pressure and leads to a polar state 10 . According to DFT, epitaxial SrMnO 3 films should develop a polarisation along one of the pseudocubic <110> axes under >1% epitaxial tensile strain 8 .20-nm films of single-phase SrMnO 3 were grown using pulsed laser deposition on (001)-oriented (LaAlO 3 ) 0.3 (Sr 2 AlTaO 6 ) 0.7 (LSAT) with 1.7% tensile strain (see Methods). We characterised the strain state of the films using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and X-ray and electron diffraction. Figure 1a shows a cross-sectional STEM image evidencing the high quality of the films on the atomic scale with a sharp SrMnO 3 /LSAT (001) interface. The reciprocal space map in Fig. 1a verifies that the films are tetragonal and coherently strained. The electron diffraction In the anisotropy plot in Fig. 1c we present the optical polarisation analysis of the SHG signal obtained on a test area of 0.1 mm 2 . We fitted the angular dependence of the SHG signal by assuming a distribution of four polar domain states denoted as P 1+ , P 1− , P 2+ , P 2− . The indices refer to the orientation of the polar axis according to 1 ± ↔ ±[110] and 2 ± ↔ ±[1 10], see Fig. 1c. The coincidence of the measured data and the fit is excellent with a fitted ratio r = P 1 /P 2 = 0.53 in the population of P 1 -and P 2 -type domain states (r varied between different test areas). In contrast, fits assuming a polarisation along the[100] and [010] directions failed. We co...
In numerous systems, giant physical responses have been discovered when two phases coexist; for example, near a phase transition. An intermetallic FeRh system undergoes a first-order antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic transition above room temperature and shows two-phase coexistence near the transition. Here we have investigated the effect of an electric field to FeRh/PMN-PT heterostructures and report 8% change in the electrical resistivity of FeRh films. Such a 'giant' electroresistance (GER) response is striking in metallic systems, in which external electric fields are screened, and thus only weakly influence the carrier concentrations and mobilities. We show that our FeRh films comprise coexisting ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic phases with different resistivities and the origin of the GER effect is the strain-mediated change in their relative proportions. The observed behaviour is reminiscent of colossal magnetoresistance in perovskite manganites and illustrates the role of mixed-phase coexistence in achieving large changes in physical properties with low-energy external perturbation.
Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations within the Generalized Gradient Approximation (GGA) and the GGA + U approach are carried out to investigate the adsorption of O(2) on anatase (101) surfaces having subsurface oxygen vacancies. Our results show that O(2) adsorption is strongly enhanced at sites close to the subsurface defect, whereas dissociation is unfavorable at all sites. The adsorption is accompanied by the transfer of the defect electrons to O(2)-derived electronic states in the anatase surface band gap. Peroxide species (O(2)(2-), O-O = 1.48 Å) are stable when the number of adsorbed O(2) molecules is less or equal the number of defects, whereas superoxide species (O(2)(-), O-O = 1.33 Å) become more favorable at coverages exceeding approximately 1.5 O(2) molecules per oxygen vacancy.
The interaction of atomic hydrogen with the majority (101) surface of anatase TiO(2) is studied using density functional theory calculations both with a standard semi-local functional and with the inclusion of on-site Coulomb repulsion terms. We investigate the energetics of different adsorption configurations at surface and subsurface sites and different coverages, from low to one monolayer, as well as diffusion pathways among the different sites and recombinative H(2) desorption barriers. While H(2) desorption is the energetically most favorable process, the diffusion of H into the subsurface is found to be at least equally favorable kinetically. It is further shown that subsurface oxygen vacancies on reduced anatase are favorable adsorption sites for hydrogen atoms.
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