Room temperature ferromagnetism in transparent conducting Fe-doped In$_{2}$O$_{3}$ films

ORAL

Abstract

Oxide semiconductors have been widely studied as a host compound for spintronic devices since they can be doped with transition metals to realize a higher Curie temperature and can produce high n-type carriers by either doping with Group IV elements or introducing oxygen vacancies. Among various oxide semiconductors, Fe-doped In$_{2}$O$_{3}$ is a promising ferromagnetic semiconductor due to the high solubility of Fe-ions into the In$_{2}$O$_{3}$ lattice. Recently, at NRL, In$_{2-x}$Fe$_{x}$O$_{3}$ thin films have been deposited on MgO, sapphire, and YSZ substrates by pulsed laser deposition. The lattice constant decreases linearly with increasing Fe-doping concentration suggesting the incorporation of Fe ions into the In$_{2}$O$_{3}$ lattice matrix. Magneto-transport characteristics including anomalous Hall effect along with structural analysis demonstrate that an intrinsic ferromagnetism is observed for some films grown under optimized conditions. In this presentation, we will discuss our work to date on the growth of In$_{2-x}$Fe$_{x}$O$_{3}$ thin films grown by pulsed laser deposition with various deposition conditions and present the structural, optical, magnetic, and transport properties along with spin-polarization measurements.

Authors

  • Michael Osofsky

    NRL, Naval Research Laboratory

  • Heungsoo Kim

    Naval Research Laboratory

  • Michael Miller

    Naval Research Laboratory

  • Seyed Qadri

    Naval Research Laboratory

  • Raymond Auyeung

    Naval Research Laboratory

  • Alberto Pique

    Naval Research Laboratory