Ionically-controlled phase separation in cobaltite heterostructures
ORAL
Abstract
Controlling ionic distribution and stoichiometry in complex oxide heterostructures has been utilized to significantly alter and tune functional properties. Recently, deposition of a strong oxygen getter on top of an oxide thin film has emerged as a novel way to tailor oxygen stoichiometry and nanoscale functional properties. In this talk, I will focus on Gd/La0.67Sr0.33CoO3 (LSCO) heterostructures due to the high oxygen ion conductivity, as well as the coupled magnetic and electronic properties of LSCO, which are strongly dependent on the oxygen stoichiometry. This combination of properties enable the ionic control of the functional properties of LSCO thin films through the presence of oxygen getter layers such as Gd. We utilize x-ray nanodiffraction to directly image the nanoscale morphology of LSCO thin films as they are progressively transformed from the equilibrium perovskite phase to the metastable brownmillerite (BM) phase with increasing Gd thickness. Our studies show the coexistence of perovskite and BM phases with a critical oxygen vacancy concentration threshold which leads to the formation of extended BM filaments. Our studies provide an unprecedented nanoscale survey of the phase separation in the cobaltites and shed light on the formation of the metastable BM phase.
–
Presenters
-
Roopali Kukreja
- University of California, Davis