SrTiO3 surfaces prepared by HCl etching
ORAL
Abstract
In molecular beam epitaxy synthesis of crystalline heterostructures, the quality of the substrate surface is crucial. The substrate not only provides a structural template for the deposited film, but for many new materials which are just a few atomic layers thick, the interaction with the substrate determines the emergent electronic properties. SrTiO3 substrates are widely used for growth of complex oxides and superconducting FeSe, but reproducible surface preparation remains challenging. The standard recipe employs a buffered hydrofluoric acid etch, but it has been shown that this step results in significant fluorine replacement of oxygen near the surface of SrTiO3 [1]. Here we characterize halogen doping from use of an alternative etchant, hydrochloric acid.
[1] S.A. Chambers, T.C. Droubay, C. Capan, and G.Y. Sun, Surface Science 606, 554-558 (2012).
[1] S.A. Chambers, T.C. Droubay, C. Capan, and G.Y. Sun, Surface Science 606, 554-558 (2012).
–
Presenters
-
Camille Bean
Physics, Harvard University
Authors
-
Camille Bean
Physics, Harvard University
-
Miro Furtado
Physics, Harvard University
-
Jason D. Hoffman
Physics, Harvard University
-
Tatiana Webb
Physics, Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Harvard University
-
Christian Matt
Department of Physics, Harvard University, Physics Department, Harvard University, Physics, Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States
-
Jennifer Hoffman
Physics, Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States