| Literature DB >> 32025010 |
Hyun S Kum1, Hyungwoo Lee2, Sungkyu Kim1, Shane Lindemann2, Wei Kong1, Kuan Qiao1, Peng Chen1, Julian Irwin3, June Hyuk Lee4, Saien Xie5,6, Shruti Subramanian7, Jaewoo Shim1, Sang-Hoon Bae1, Chanyeol Choi8, Luigi Ranno1,9, Seungju Seo1, Sangho Lee1,9, Jackson Bauer9, Huashan Li10, Kyusang Lee11,12, Joshua A Robinson7, Caroline A Ross9, Darrell G Schlom5,6, Mark S Rzchowski3, Chang-Beom Eom13, Jeehwan Kim14,15,16,17.
Abstract
Complex-oxide materials exhibit a vast range of functional properties desirable for next-generation electronic, spintronic, magnetoelectric, neuromorphic, and energy conversion storage devices1-4. Their physical functionalities can be coupled by stacking layers of such materials to create heterostructures and can be further boosted by applying strain5-7. The predominant method for heterogeneous integration and application of strain has been through heteroepitaxy, which drastically limits the possible material combinations and the ability to integrate complex oxides with mature semiconductor technologies. Moreover, key physical properties of complex-oxide thin films, such as piezoelectricity and magnetostriction, are severely reduced by the substrate clamping effect. Here we demonstrate a universal mechanical exfoliation method of producing freestanding single-crystalline membranes made from a wide range of complex-oxide materials including perovskite, spinel and garnet crystal structures with varying crystallographic orientations. In addition, we create artificial heterostructures and hybridize their physical properties by directly stacking such freestanding membranes with different crystal structures and orientations, which is not possible using conventional methods. Our results establish a platform for stacking and coupling three-dimensional structures, akin to two-dimensional material-based heterostructures, for enhancing device functionalities8,9.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32025010 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-1939-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962