| Literature DB >> 30457322 |
Tianqi Wang, Abhinav Prakash, Yongqi Dong1, Tristan Truttmann, Ashley Bucsek, Richard James, Dillon D Fong, Jong-Woo Kim, Philip J Ryan, Hua Zhou, Turan Birol, Bharat Jalan.
Abstract
High-speed electronics require epitaxial films with exceptionally high carrier mobility at room temperature (RT). Alkaline-earth stannates with high RT mobility show outstanding prospects for oxide electronics operating at ambient temperatures. However, despite significant progress over the last few years, mobility in stannate films has been limited by dislocations because of the inability to grow fully coherent films. Here, we demonstrate the growth of coherent, strain-engineered phases of epitaxial SrSnO3 (SSO) films using a radical-based molecular beam epitaxy approach. Compressive strain stabilized the high-symmetry tetragonal phase of SSO at RT, which, in bulk, exists only at temperatures between 1062 and 1295 K. We achieved a mobility enhancement of over 300% in doped films compared with the low-temperature orthorhombic polymorph. Using comprehensive temperature-dependent synchrotron-based X-ray measurements, electronic transport, and first principles calculations, crystal and electronic structures of SSO films were investigated as a function of strain. We argue that strain-engineered films of stannate will enable high mobility oxide electronics operating at RT with the added advantage of being optically transparent.Entities:
Keywords: density functional theory; half-order diffraction; high mobility; hybrid molecular beam epitaxy; octahedral rotations; phase transition; strain engineering
Year: 2018 PMID: 30457322 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b16592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229