Oxygen vacancy ordering in transition-metal-oxide LaCoO$_{3}$ films

ORAL

Abstract

Oxygen vacancies in complex oxides affect the structure and the electronic and magnetic properties. Here we use atomically-resolved Z-contrast imaging, electron-energy-loss spectroscopy and densityfunctional calculations to demonstrate that ordered oxygen vacancies may act as the controlling degree of freedom for the structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of LaCoO$_{3}$ thin films. We find that epitaxial strain is released through the formation of O vacancy superlattices. The O vacancies donate excess electrons to the Co $d$-states, resulting in ferromagnetic ordering. The appearance of Peierls-like minigaps followed by strain relaxation triggers a nonlinear rupture of the energy bands, which explains the observed insulating behavior. We conclude that oxygen vacancy ordering constitutes a degree of freedom that can be used to engineer novel behavior in complex-oxide films.

*Research at ORNL supported by U.S. DOE-BES, Materials Sciences and Engineering Div. and by ORNL's ShaRE User Program (DOE-BES), at UCM by the ERC Starting Inv. Award, at UC Berkeley and LBNL by BES-DMSE, at Vanderbilt by U.S DOE and the McMinn Endowment.

Authors

  • Neven Biskup

    • Univ. Complutense, Spain
  • Juan Salafranca

    • Univ. Complutense, Spain
  • Virat Mehta

    • Univ. California, Berkeley
  • Yuri Suzuki

    • Univ. California, Berkeley and LBNL
  • Stephen Pennycook

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Sokrates Pantelides

    • Vanderbilt University
  • Maria Varela

    • Materials science and Technology Div. Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Tn 37831-6071
    • Condensed Matter Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • Univ. Complutense, Spain