| Literature DB >> 27767066 |
Silvia Haindl1,2, Kota Hanzawa1, Hikaru Sato1, Hidenori Hiramatsu1,3, Hideo Hosono1,3.
Abstract
Oxypnictide thin film growth by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) is one of many insufficiently resolved issues in the research of iron-based superconductors. Here we report on the successful realization of superconducting SmO1-xFxFeAs oxypnictide thin film growth by in-situ PLD on CaF2 (fluorite) substrates. CaF2 acts as fluorine supplier by diffusion and thus enables superconducting oxypnictide thin film growth by PLD. Films are grown heteroepitaxially and characteristically have a broad resistive normal-to-superconducting transition. Best films have onset transition temperatures around 40 K. The proposed in-situ PLD film growth offers an alternative and cheap route for the fabrication of iron oxypnictides. PLD becomes now an additional option for iron oxypnictide synthesis.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27767066 PMCID: PMC5073333 DOI: 10.1038/srep35797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) High resolution XRD (2θ/ω-scan) of SmOFeAs/BaFe2As2/MgO. 00l reflections of each phase are indexed. The BaFe2As2 layer (Ba-122) has a thickness of about 16 nm (c122 = 12.97 Å). The SmOFeAs layer (Sm-1111) was deposited at 860 °C and is about 36 nm thin (c1111 = 8.53 Å). (b) No superconducting transition is detected in the electrical resistance measured down to 2 K.
Figure 2(a) High resolution XRD (2θ/ω-scan) of SmO1−F FeAs/CaF2. 00l reflections of the 1111 phase and the substrate are indexed. The obtained lattice parameter is c1111 = 8.66 Å. Small amount of Fe impurity is found as indicated by the Fe 110 reflection. (b) A total film thickness of 58.4 nm was evaluated from a fit of the normalized XRR intensity in the range of 2θ = 0.6°–1.8°. (c) 008 Bragg reflection with total maximum at 2θ ≈ 90.95° as a superposition of two extremal profiles p1 (with maximum at 2θ ≈ 90.9°) and p2 (with maximum at 2θ ≈ 92.1°). (d) Pole figure (ψ, ϕ) for 2θ = 47.0° ± 1.0° with CaF2 202 and SmO1−FFeAs 104 reflections. (e) Pole figure (ψ, ϕ) for 2θ = 30.0° ± 1.2° with CaF2 111 and SmO1−FFeAs 102 reflections.
Figure 3(a) AFM image (10 × 10 μm2) of the film surface (film deposition time = 10 min) scanned with a rate of 0.5 Hz and 512 samples/line along the crystallographic [100] direction of the SmO1−FFeAs film. Apart from (1) droplets the film surface topography is characterized by (2) a line-shaped defect structure oriented along the crystallographic [100] and [010] direction of SmO1−FFeAs. The root-mean-squared roughness (rms) is 8.5 nm. (b) Profile of a vertical line scan (3) across the defect structure. The estimated size of the defects is about 500 × 150 × 50 nm3. (c) AFM image (1 × 1 μm2) of a thinner film (deposition time = 5 min) scanned with a rate of 1.5 Hz and 512 samples/line along the crystallographic [100] direction of the SmO1−FFeAs film. Line-shaped defects do not appear here but holes (4) are still present in the microstructure after island coalescence. The rms roughness of the film surface within this scan is 0.8 nm. (d) Profile of a vertical line scan (5) across the defect structure. (e) AFM image with scan area of 500 × 500 nm2 (compare Fig. 3c). The rms roughness is 0.74 nm. (f) Selected profiles of terraces with step sizes of approximately 1 and 2 unit cells. (g) SEM image of a film surface with initial cracks and (h) induced cracks during scanning of the electron beam on the same magnified area of the film. The cracks (white contrast) appear quickly within several seconds.
Figure 4(a) Resistive transitions R(T) for zero field and magnetic fields (0.5, 2, 4, 6, 8 T) applied parallel to the c-axis and perpendicular to the c-axis. The criteria of 90%, 50% and 10% of normal resistance above the transition are indicated by dashed lines. (b) Magnetic phase diagram μ0H(T) evaluated for different criteria.