| Literature DB >> 27876830 |
Sheng Cheng1, Jiangbo Lu1, Dong Han2, Ming Liu1, Xiaoli Lu3, Chunrui Ma4, Shengbai Zhang5, Chonglin Chen6,7.
Abstract
Giant optical transmittance changes of over 300% in wide wavelength range from 500 nm to 2500 nm were observed in LaBaCo2O5.5+δ thin films annealed in air and ethanol ambient, respectively. The reduction process induces high density of ordered oxygen vacancies and the formation of LaBaCo2O5.5 (δ = 0) structure evidenced by aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy. Moreover, the first-principles calculations reveal the origin and mechanism of optical transmittance enhancement in LaBaCo2O5.5 (δ = 0), which exhibits quite different energy band structure compared to that of LaBaCo2O6 (δ = 0.5). The discrepancy of energy band structure was thought to be the direct reason for the enhancement of optical transmission in reducing ambient. Hence, LaBaCo2O5.5+δ thin films show great prospect for applications on optical gas sensors in reducing/oxidizing atmosphere.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27876830 PMCID: PMC5120332 DOI: 10.1038/srep37496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Transmittance spectrum of the LBCO films annealed at air and 1000 ppm ethanol vapor exposure at 375 °C, respectively.
Figure 2Reciprocal space mapping taken around (103) reflections of the LBCO films annealed at (a) air, and (b) 1000 ppm ethanol vapor exposure at 375 °C, respectively.
In-plane and out-of-plane lattice parameters and tetragonality of the LBCO films annealed in air and Ethanol1000 ppm environments.
| Different ambient gases | Lattice Parameters (in-plane) | Lattice Parameter (out-of-plane) | Tetragonality (c/a) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Air | 3.868 Å | 3.946 Å | 1.020 |
| Ethanol1000ppm | 3.868 Å | 4.000 Å | 1.034 |
Figure 3(a) High resolution transmission electron microscopy image using the NCSI technique of the LBCO thin film and LSAT substrate. Atom sites appear bright on a dark background. The yellow arrow denotes the interface. The red rectangles and arrows denote the oxygen deficient layers. The spherical aberration coefficient was adjusted for CS = −15 μm, and an over focus of ΔZ = +5 nm was used. Inset in the upper left corner shows the selected area diffraction patterns from the interface area of film and substrate. Inset in the lower right corner shows a lower magnification HAADF-STEM image of the film and substrate. (b) Magnified typical image using NCSI technique of LBCO film from thin area indicating the ordered oxygen vacancy structure. (c) Calculated image of the LaBaCo2O5.5 (spherical aberration coefficient CS = −15 μm; specimen thickness: 3 nm; defocus ΔZ = +3 nm; convergence angle: 0.2 mrad; defocus spread: 2.8 nm). The red rectangle shows the region where the intensity line profile analysis was carried out, the red curve shows the corresponding intensity trace. The red arrows indicate the oxygen vacancy layers.
Figure 4(a) The Density of states (DOS) of LaBaCo2O6 with both antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic phases and LaBaCo2O5.5 with antiferromagnetic phase. The positive value of DOS stands for spin up and the negative value of DOS stands for spin down. The dash line at zero stands for Fermi level. (b) The calculated optical absorption of LaBaCo2O6 with both antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic phases and LaBaCo2O5.5 with antiferromagnetic phase.