Interfacial mechanical coupling at the interface of Pb<sub>0.2</sub>Zr<sub>0.8</sub>TiO<sub>3</sub>/LaNiO<sub>3</sub>/SrTiO<sub>3</sub> heterostructures
ORAL
Abstract
The coupling of ferroelectric polarization to the conducting oxide LaNiO3 results in large changes of the conductivity at an epitaxial ferroelectric-LaNiO3 interface. Systematic measurements of the conductivity with varying LaNiO3 conducting channel thickness show that the effect is confined to within a few atomic layers of the interface. We correlate changes in conductivity with structural changes in the ferroelectric and conducting oxide as the ferroelectric polarization is switched through in operando synchrotron diffraction measurements. We observe changes in the tetragonality and displacement of the transition metal cations and oxygen anions in both Pb0.2Zr0.8TiO3 and LaNiO3. We also characterize rotations of oxygen octahedra in LaNiO3 via measurement of half order Bragg peaks. These rotations exhibit a hysteresis loop as the applied voltage is swept through the coercive field of the ferroelectric and are correlated with the conductivity of the channel, with larger rotations leading to smaller conductivity. The observed changes in conductivity are larger than that expected from band theory alone, implying a large role of electronic correlations. By using the ferroelectric to effect changes in the structure, we explore the correlated transport behavior of LaNiO3 in new ways.
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Presenters
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Claudia Lau
- Department of Physics, Yale University