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Emergent electric field control of phase transformation in oxide superlattices

Author

Listed:
  • Di Yi

    (Stanford University)

  • Yujia Wang

    (Tsinghua University)

  • Olaf M. J. van ʼt Erve

    (Materials Science and Technology Division, US Naval Research Laboratory)

  • Liubin Xu

    (University of Tennessee)

  • Hongtao Yuan

    (Nanjing University)

  • Michael J. Veit

    (Stanford University
    Stanford University)

  • Purnima P. Balakrishnan

    (Stanford University
    Stanford University)

  • Yongseong Choi

    (Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory)

  • Alpha T. N’Diaye

    (Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

  • Padraic Shafer

    (Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

  • Elke Arenholz

    (Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    Cornell University)

  • Alexander Grutter

    (NIST Center for Neutron Research, National Institute of Standards and Technology)

  • Haixuan Xu

    (University of Tennessee)

  • Pu Yu

    (Tsinghua University
    Frontier Science Center for Quantum Information
    RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science (CEMS))

  • Berend T. Jonker

    (Materials Science and Technology Division, US Naval Research Laboratory)

  • Yuri Suzuki

    (Stanford University
    Stanford University)

Abstract

Electric fields can transform materials with respect to their structure and properties, enabling various applications ranging from batteries to spintronics. Recently electrolytic gating, which can generate large electric fields and voltage-driven ion transfer, has been identified as a powerful means to achieve electric-field-controlled phase transformations. The class of transition metal oxides provide many potential candidates that present a strong response under electrolytic gating. However, very few show a reversible structural transformation at room-temperature. Here, we report the realization of a digitally synthesized transition metal oxide that shows a reversible, electric-field-controlled transformation between distinct crystalline phases at room-temperature. In superlattices comprised of alternating one-unit-cell of SrIrO3 and La0.2Sr0.8MnO3, we find a reversible phase transformation with a 7% lattice change and dramatic modulation in chemical, electronic, magnetic and optical properties, mediated by the reversible transfer of oxygen and hydrogen ions. Strikingly, this phase transformation is absent in the constituent oxides, solid solutions and larger period superlattices. Our findings open up this class of materials for voltage-controlled functionality.

Suggested Citation

  • Di Yi & Yujia Wang & Olaf M. J. van ʼt Erve & Liubin Xu & Hongtao Yuan & Michael J. Veit & Purnima P. Balakrishnan & Yongseong Choi & Alpha T. N’Diaye & Padraic Shafer & Elke Arenholz & Alexander Grut, 2020. "Emergent electric field control of phase transformation in oxide superlattices," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 11(1), pages 1-8, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:11:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-020-14631-3
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-14631-3
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