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Interfacial charge transfer in atomically thin SrIrO<sub>3</sub> / SrRuO<sub>3</sub> heterostructures

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

Metallic interfacial quantum materials are most readily detected at the interface between two insulating constituents by probes such as electrical transport. However, when either material is conducting, transport techniques become insensitive to interfacial properties. To overcome these limitations, we employ angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and molecular beam epitaxy to reveal the electronic structure, charge transfer, doping profile, and carrier effective masses in a layer-by-layer fashion for the interface between the Dirac nodal-line semimetal SrIrO3 and the correlated metallic ferromagnet SrRuO3. Through comparisons with first-principles theory calculations, we determine that electrons are transferred from the SrIrO3 to SrRuO3, with an estimated screening length of 3.2± 0.1 Å. In addition, we find that metallicity is preserved even down to a single SrIrO3 layer, where the dimensionality-driven metal-insulator transition typically observed in SrIrO3 is avoided because of the strong hybridization of the Ir and Ru t2g states.

Publication: J.N. Nelson et al., Science Advances 8, eabj0481 (2022); 10.1126/sciadv.abj0481

Presenters

  • Kyle M Shen

    Cornell University

Authors

  • Kyle M Shen

    Cornell University

  • Jocienne N Nelson

    National Renewable Energy Laboratory

  • Alexandru Bogdan Georgescu

    Northwestern University

  • Nathaniel J Schreiber

    Cornell University

  • Berit H Goodge

    Cornell University

  • Christopher T Parzyck

    Cornell University, Department of Physics, Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA

  • Brendan D Faeth

    Cornell University

  • Lena F Kourkoutis

    Cornell University, School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University

  • Andrew Millis

    Columbia University, Columbia University, Flatiron Institute

  • Antoine Georges

    College de France

  • Darrell G Schlom

    Cornell University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University