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Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
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    High temperature reactive ion etching of iridium thin films with aluminum mask in CF4/O2/Ar plasma
    (New York : American Institute of Physics, 2016) Yeh, Chia-Pin; Lisker, Marco; Kalkofen, Bodo; Burte, Edmund P.
    Reactive ion etching (RIE) technology for iridium with CF4/O2/Ar gas mixtures and aluminum mask at high temperatures up to 350 °C was developed. The influence of various process parameters such as gas mixing ratio and substrate temperature on the etch rate was studied in order to find optimal process conditions. The surface of the samples after etching was found to be clean under SEM inspection. It was also shown that the etch rate of iridium could be enhanced at higher process temperature and, at the same time, very high etching selectivity between aluminum etching mask and iridium could be achieved.
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    Origin of Terahertz Soft-Mode Nonlinearities in Ferroelectric Perovskites
    (College Park, Md. : APS, 2021) Pal, Shovon; Strkalj, Nives; Yang, Chia-Jung; Weber, Mads C.; Trassin, Morgan; Woerner, Michael; Fiebig, Manfred
    Soft modes are intimately linked to structural instabilities and are key for the understanding of phase transitions. The soft modes in ferroelectrics, for example, map directly the polar order parameter of a crystal lattice. Driving these modes into the nonlinear, frequency-changing regime with intense terahertz (THz) light fields is an efficient way to alter the lattice and, with it, the physical properties. However, recent studies show that the THz electric-field amplitudes triggering a nonlinear soft-mode response are surprisingly low, which raises the question on the microscopic picture behind the origin of this nonlinear response. Here, we use linear and two-dimensional terahertz (2D THz) spectroscopy to unravel the origin of the soft-mode nonlinearities in a strain-engineered epitaxial ferroelectric SrTiO3 thin film. We find that the linear dielectric function of this mode is quantitatively incompatible with pure ionic or pure electronic motions. Instead, 2D THz spectroscopy reveals a pronounced coupling of electronic and ionic-displacement dipoles. Hence, the soft mode is a hybrid mode of lattice (ionic) motions and electronic interband transitions. We confirm this conclusion with model calculations based on a simplified pseudopotential concept of the electronic band structure. It reveals that the entire THz nonlinearity is caused by the off-resonant nonlinear response of the electronic interband transitions of the lattice-electronic hybrid mode. With this work, we provide fundamental insights into the microscopic processes that govern the softness that any material assumes near a ferroic phase transition. This knowledge will allow us to gain an efficient all-optical control over the associated large nonlinear effects.
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    Huge impact of compressive strain on phase transition temperatures in epitaxial ferroelectric KxNa1-xNbO3 thin films
    (Melville, NY : American Inst. of Physics, 2019) Von Helden, L.; Bogula, L.; Janolin, P.-E.; Hanke, M.; Breuer, T.; Schmidbauer, M.; Ganschow, S.; Schwarzkopf, J.
    We present a study in which ferroelectric phase transition temperatures in epitaxial KxNa1-xNbO3 films are altered systematically by choosing different (110)-oriented rare-earth scandate substrates and by variation of the potassium to sodium ratio. Our results prove the capability to continuously shift the ferroelectric-to-ferroelectric transition from the monoclinic MC to orthorhombic c-phase by about 400 °C via the application of anisotropic compressive strain. The phase transition was investigated in detail by monitoring the temperature dependence of ferroelectric domain patterns using piezoresponse force microscopy and upon analyzing structural changes by means of high resolution X-ray diffraction including X-ray reciprocal space mapping. Moreover, the temperature evolution of the effective piezoelectric coefficient d33,f was determined using double beam laser interferometry, which exhibits a significant dependence on the particular ferroelectric phase. © 2019 Author(s).
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    Evidence for spin to charge conversion in GeTe(111)
    (New York : American Institute of Physics, 2016) Rinaldi, C.; Rojas-Sánchez, J.C.; Wang, R.N.; Fu, Y.; Oyarzun, S.; Vila, L.; Bertoli, S.; Asa, M.; Baldrati, L.; Cantoni, M.; George, J.-M.; Calarco, R.; Fert, A.; Bertacco, R.
    GeTe has been predicted to be the father compound of a new class of multifunctional materials, ferroelectric Rashba semiconductors, displaying a coupling between spin-dependent k-splitting and ferroelectricity. In this paper, we report on epitaxial Fe/GeTe(111) heterostructures grown by molecular beam epitaxy. Spin-pumping experiments have been performed in a radio-frequency cavity by pumping a spin current from the Fe layer into GeTe at the Fe ferromagnetic resonance and detecting the transverse charge current originated in the slab due to spin-to-charge conversion. Preliminary experiments indicate that a clear spin to charge conversion exists, thus unveiling the potential of GeTe for spin-orbitronics.
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    Soft-mode driven polarity reversal in ferroelectrics mapped by ultrafast x-ray diffraction
    (Melville, NY : AIP Publishing LLC, 2018) Hauf, Christoph; Hernandez Salvador, Antonio-Andres; Holtz, Marcel; Woerner, Michael; Elsaesser, Thomas
    Quantum theory has linked microscopic currents and macroscopic polarizations of ferroelectrics, but the interplay of lattice excitations and charge dynamics on atomic length and time scales is an open problem. Upon phonon excitation in the prototypical ferroelectric ammonium sulfate [(NH4)2SO4], we determine transient charge density maps by femtosecond x-ray diffraction. A newly discovered low frequency-mode with a 3 ps period and sub-picometer amplitudes induces periodic charge relocations over some 100 pm, a hallmark of soft-mode behavior. The transient charge density allows for deriving the macroscopic polarization, showing a periodic reversal of polarity.