Two-dimensional electron gas in tricolor oxide interfaces
ORAL
Abstract
Understanding and manipulating spin of electrons in nanometer scale is the main challenge of current spintronics, recent emergent two-dimensional electron gas in oxide interface provides a good platform to investigate the spin behavior by covering an insulating magnetic oxide layer. In this work, take titanates as an example, ultra-thin tricolor (tri-compound) titanate superlattices ([LaTiO3/SrTiO3/YTiO3]) were grown in a layer-by-layer way by pulsed laser deposition. High sample quality and their electronic structures were characterized by the combination of in-situ photoelectron and ex-situ structure and surface morphology probes. Temperature-dependent sheet resistance indicates the presence of metallic interfaces in both [LaTiO3 /SrTiO3 ] and all the tricolor structures, whereas a [YTiO3 /SrTiO3] bi-layer shows insulating behavior. The tricolor titanate superlattices provide an opportunity to induce tunable spin-polarization into the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) with Mott carriers.
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