Ferroelectric Control of Normal and Superconducting States in Oxide Interface by Intrinsic and Extrinsic Bias
ORAL
Abstract
We deposit the polar oxide LaAlO3 on Ca doped SrTiO3 with various Ca concentrations. The latter becomes ferroelectric below 30K. The resulting interface is conducting with a critical thickness of 3 unit cells of LaAlO3. A large increase in the interface resistance is observed as the temperature is decreased below the ferroelectric transition with a strong hysteretic behavior as a function of gate voltage. Below Tc 300mK the sample becomes superconducting with a clear hysteresis in Tc with respect to the applied gate voltage. We use scanning SQUID to image the current flow patterns and follow them as a function of gate voltage. We find that the polar LaAlO3 induces an effective gate bias even when cooling down at zero applied electric field. This effective gate bias has a three-fold effect: it pins the ferroelectric domains near the interface, it reduces the carrier density and confines the current flow. We suggest this effective gate bias as a way to control the initial state of a ferroelectric material. The hysteresis observed both in the normal state and in the superconducting one can lead to a multifaceted controllable memory device.
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Presenters
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Gal Tuvia
- Tel Aviv University