Harnessing the topotactic transition in oxide heterostructures for fast and high-efficiency electrochromic applications.
Ji Soo LimJounghee LeeByeoung Ju LeeYong-Jin KimHeung-Sik ParkJeonghun SuhHo-Hyun NahmSang-Woo KimByeong-Gwan ChoTae Yeong KooEunjip ChoiYong-Hyun KimChan-Ho YangPublished in: Science advances (2020)
Mobile oxygen vacancies offer a substantial potential to broaden the range of optical functionalities of complex transition metal oxides due to their high mobility and the interplay with correlated electrons. Here, we report a large electro-absorptive optical variation induced by a topotactic transition via oxygen vacancy fluidic motion in calcium ferrite with large-scale uniformity. The coloration efficiency reaches ~80 cm2 C-1, which means that a 300-nm-thick layer blocks 99% of transmitted visible light by the electrical switching. By tracking the color propagation, oxygen vacancy mobility can be estimated to be 10-8 cm2 s-1 V-1 near 300°C, which is a giant value attained due to the mosaic pseudomonoclinic film stabilized on LaAlO3 substrate. First-principles calculations reveal that the defect density modulation associated with hole charge injection causes a prominent change in electron correlation, resulting in the light absorption modulation. Our findings will pave the pathway for practical topotactic electrochromic applications.