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Manipulating the Structural and Electronic Properties of Epitaxial SrCoO2.5 Thin Films by Tuning the Epitaxial Strain.

Jiali ZhaoHaizhong GuoXu HeQinghua ZhangLin GuXiaolong LiKui-Juan JinTieying YangChen GeYi LuoMeng HeYouwen LongJia-Ou WangHaijie QianCan WangHuibin LuGuozhen YangKurash Ibrahim
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Structure determines material's functionality, and strain tunes the structure. Tuning the coherent epitaxial strain by varying the thickness of the films is a precise route to manipulate the functional properties in the low-dimensional oxide materials. Here, to explore the effects of the coherent epitaxial strain on the properties of SrCoO2.5 thin films, thickness-dependent evolutions of the structural properties and electronic structures were investigated by X-ray diffraction, Raman spectra, optical absorption spectra, scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), and first-principles calculations. By increasing the thickness of the SrCoO2.5 films, the c-axis lattice constant decreases, indicating the relaxation of the coherent epitaxial strain. The energy band gap increases and the Raman spectra undergo a substantial softening with the relaxation of the coherent epitaxial strain. From the STEM results, it can be concluded that the strain causes the variation of the oxygen content in the BM-SCO2.5 films, which results in the variation of band gaps with varying the strain. First-principles calculations show that strain-induced changes in bond lengths and angles of the octahedral CoO6 and tetrahedral CoO4 cannot explain the variation band gap. Our findings offer an alternative strategy to manipulate structural and electronic properties by tuning the coherent epitaxial strain in transition-metal oxide thin films.
Keyphrases
  • electron microscopy
  • high resolution
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • magnetic resonance
  • transition metal
  • computed tomography
  • high speed