| Literature DB >> 27482108 |
Jian Shao1, Hao Liu1, Kai Zhang1, Yang Yu1, Weichao Yu1, Hanxuan Lin1, Jiebin Niu1, Kai Du1, Yunfang Kou1, Wengang Wei1, Fanli Lan1, Yinyan Zhu1, Wenbin Wang1, Jiang Xiao1, Lifeng Yin2, E W Plummer3, Jian Shen2.
Abstract
In complex oxides systems such as manganites, electronic phase separation (EPS), a consequence of strong electronic correlations, dictates the exotic electrical and magnetic properties of these materials. A fundamental yet unresolved issue is how EPS responds to spatial confinement; will EPS just scale with size of an object, or will the one of the phases be pinned? Understanding this behavior is critical for future oxides electronics and spintronics because scaling down of the system is unavoidable for these applications. In this work, we use La0.325Pr0.3Ca0.375MnO3 (LPCMO) single crystalline disks to study the effect of spatial confinement on EPS. The EPS state featuring coexistence of ferromagnetic metallic and charge order insulating phases appears to be the low-temperature ground state in bulk, thin films, and large disks, a previously unidentified ground state (i.e., a single ferromagnetic phase state emerges in smaller disks). The critical size is between 500 nm and 800 nm, which is similar to the characteristic length scale of EPS in the LPCMO system. The ability to create a pure ferromagnetic phase in manganite nanodisks is highly desirable for spintronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: electronic phase separation; magnetization; manganites; single phase
Year: 2016 PMID: 27482108 PMCID: PMC4995970 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1609656113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205