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Effect of laser plasma parameters on epitaxial growth of β-FeSe/SrTiO­­­­<sub>3</sub> heterostructures

POSTER

Abstract

The combination of different materials in heterostructures often enables phenomena that are impossible to achieve in a single compound. A now-classic example is the interface-enhanced superconductivity of monolayer β-FeSe on (001)-oriented SrTiO3 (STO). Plasma-synthesized heterostructures based on this system are suitable for the creation of quantum materials configurations to study interface-enhanced processes, magnetic/superconducting proximity effects, and control of quantum properties via electrostatic gating. In this work, we show how tuning the laser-produced plasma of pulsed laser deposition can alter the structure and interface of β-FeSe/STO heterostructures. Langmuir probe diagnostics and thin film x-ray diffraction were utilized. Laser plasmas with electron density (ne) below ~5×1019 m-3 and electron temperatures (Te) of 0.1-0.2 eV lead to epitaxial c-axis oriented β-FeSe/STO with clear thickness fringes in dynamical x-ray diffraction (Pendellösung oscillations), indicating high crystal quality and sharp interface. On the other hand, plasmas with ne ~1020 m-3 and Te ≈ 0.5-0.6 eV result in β-FeSe with a mixture of two epitaxial orientations, less defined interface, and a greater degree of mosaicity or defects. We will describe how adjusting the laser plasma parameters may allow further control in plasma-mediated growth of β-FeSe/STO such as spatial modulation of nucleation sites, modification of island growth patterns, and activation of plasma-enhanced surface reactivity.

Presenters

  • Adam D. Smith

    Department of Physics, University of Alabama at Birmingham

Authors

  • Adam D. Smith

    Department of Physics, University of Alabama at Birmingham

  • Kamron L Kopecky

    Department of Physics, University of Alabama at Birmingham

  • Sumner B Harris

    Department of Physics, University of Alabama at Birmingham

  • Mphande Phiri

    Alabama A&M University

  • Renato P Camata

    Department of Physics, University of Alabama at Birmingham