Sub-monolayer Strontium Phase Diagram on Silicon (100)

ORAL

Abstract

Crystalline oxides manifest a number of important phenomena, including magnetism, ferroelectricity, superconductivity, and colossal magnetoresistance. Recently, it has become possible to integrate these materials onto a silicon platform in a fully epitaxial structure. These crystalline oxide-silicon heterostructures bring the promise of integrating the rich functionality present in crystalline oxides with modern silicon device technology. The most successful fully epitaxial oxide-silicon (100) heterostructures have been achieved through a deposition recipe that involves manipulating substrate temperature and oxygen pressure on a layer by layer basis during the deposition of an alkaline earth metal. Motivated by a desire to develop a fundamental understanding of this important transition layer between silicon and oxide, we have mapped out the phase diagram of strontium on silicon as a function of temperature and coverage. In particular, recent work on sub-monolayer strontium deposition on the silicon surface suggests the conventional picture of this structure, upon which the entire crystalline oxides on silicon framework is built, is only a low-temperature phase which plays no role in enabling epitaxial oxide growth. Instead, there is strong evidence that a different high temperature phase is the crucial template for epitaxial oxide growth on silicon.

Authors

  • J. Reiner

    • Yale University
    • Yale University Department of Applied Physics
    • Department of Applied Physics, Yale University
  • Kevin Garrity

    • Yale University
    • Yale University Department of Physics
  • Frederick Walker

    • Yale University
    • Yale University Department of Applied Physics
  • Sohrab Ismail-Beigi

    • Department of Applied Physics, Yale University
    • Center for Research on Interface Structures and Phenomena (CRISP) and Department of Applied Physics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520
    • Yale University
    • Yale University Department of Applied Physics
  • C.H. Ahn

    • Yale University
    • Yale University Department of Applied Physics
    • Department of Applied Physics, Yale University
    • Department of Applied Physics and Center for Research on Interface Structures and Phenomena, Yale University
    • Department of Applied Physics and Center for Research on Interface Structures and Phenomena, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520