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Self-healing Growth of LaNiO 3 on a Mixed-Terminated Perovskite Surface.

Yan LiFriederike WrobelYingjie ChengXi YanHui CaoZhongying ZhangAnand BhattacharyaJirong SunHawoong HongHuan-Hua WangYuzi LiuHua ZhouDillon D Fong
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Developing atomic-scale synthesis control is a prerequisite for understanding and engineering the exotic physics inherent to transition-metal oxide heterostructures. Thus, far, however, the number of materials systems explored has been extremely limited, particularly with regard to the crystalline substrate, which is routinely SrTiO 3 . Here, we investigate the growth of a rare-earth nickelate─LaNiO 3 ─on (LaAlO 3 )(Sr 2 AlTaO 6 ) (LSAT) (001) by oxide molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). Whereas the LSAT substrates are smooth, they do not exhibit the single surface termination usually assumed necessary for control over the interface structure. Performing both nonresonant and resonant anomalous in situ synchrotron surface X-ray scattering during MBE growth, we show that reproducible heterostructures can be achieved regardless of both the mixed surface termination and the layer-by-layer deposition sequence. The rearrangement of the layers occurs dynamically during growth, resulting in the fabrication of high-quality LaNiO 3 /LSAT heterostructures with a sharp and consistent interfacial structure. This is due to the thermodynamics of the deposition window as well as the nature of the chemical species at interfaces─here, the flexible charge state of nickel at the oxide surface. This has important implications regarding the use of a wider variety of substrates for fundamental studies on complex oxide synthesis.
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