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Effects of epitaxial strain and oxygen underdoping on order parameter competition in manganite/cuprate thin-film heterostructures

ORAL

Abstract

To distinguish the role of magnetism from other factors that affect superconductivity in c-axis La2/3Ca1/3MnO3/YBa2Cu3O7-δ(LCMO/YBCO) heterostructures, we grow and characterize various perovskite/YBCO/perovskite trilayers, using ferromagnetic LCMO, paramagnetic LaNiO3 (LNO), and orthorhombic PrBa2Cu3O7-δ (PBCO) as the sandwiching layers. LCMO and LNO trilayers show similarly large superconducting Tc reductions with decreasing YBCO layer thickness, whereas this Tc reduction is not seen in the PBCO trilayers. Our results indicate that epitaxial strain has a stronger effect on the Tc of LCMO/YBCO heterostructures than any long-range magnetic proximity effect present. Using this system, we also study how the Tc reduction varies with oxygen underdoping by deoxygenating the cuprate layer. [1] We discuss our results in the wider context of multiple competing orders, in particular the recent observation by resonant x-ray scattering of robust charge-density-wave order in LCMO/YBCO multilayers. [2]
[1] H. Zhang et al., arXiv:1710.10668v1 [cond-mat.supr-con]
[2] A. Frano et. al., Nat. Materials 15:831 (2016)

Presenters

  • Hao Zhang

    Department of Physics, University of Toronto

Authors

  • Chao C Zhang

    Univ of Toronto, Department of Physics, University of Toronto

  • Hao Zhang

    Department of Physics, University of Toronto

  • Anh Nguyen

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, California State University Long Beach

  • Thomas Gredig

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, California State University Long Beach

  • Min Gu Kang

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Physics, MIT

  • Riccardo Comin

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Physics, MIT

  • John Y.T. Wei

    Univ of Toronto, University of Toronto, Department of Physics, University of Toronto