Hot Quantum Materials—Turning up the Heat to Grow Thin Films of Oxide Quantum Materials in an Adsorption Controlled Regime

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

It has long been known that molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE) works best for materials that can be grown in an adsorption-controlled regime where thermodynamics automatically provides composition control. This is where MBE started—for GaAs and other compound semiconductors—and underlies its success for producing semiconductor films with the highest purity and mobility. The same holds for the growth of thin films of oxide quantum materials by MBE, but the issue has been that it has not been possible to grow that many oxides in such a regime. In this talk I will describe how high substrate temperature opens the door to this desired growth regime for the growth of thin films of oxide quantum materials. Using a powerful CO2-laser capable of heating to substrate temperatures of 2000 °C, we have grown an increasing number of oxide quantum materials in an adsorption-controlled regime by MBE. In this talk I will show multiple examples ranging from the growth of excellent transparent conductors (SrMoO3) to incipient ferroelectrics (SrTiO3) to ferroelectrics (BaTiO3).

*This work was performed in collaboration with the following people: Dylan Sotir, Anna S. Park, Vivek Anil, Matthew R. Barone, Brendan D. Faeth, Evan Krysko, Maya Ramesh, Tobias Schwaigert, Francisco Guzman, Chaojie Du, Benjamin Gregory, Yorick Birkholzer, Steffen Ganschow, Jochen Mannhart, David A. Muller, Andrej Singer, Shun-Li Shang, Xiaoqing Pan, Zi-Kui Liu, Dmitri Tenne, and Kyle M. Shen.

*Materials synthesis was performed in a facility supported by the NSF [Platform for the Accelerated Realization, Analysis, and Discovery of Interface Materials (PARADIM)] under Cooperative Agreement No. DMR-2039380.

Presenters

  • Darrell G Schlom

    • Cornell University
    • Platform for the Accelerated Realization, Analysis, and Discovery of Interface Materials (PARADIM), Cornell University

Authors

  • Darrell G Schlom

    • Cornell University
    • Platform for the Accelerated Realization, Analysis, and Discovery of Interface Materials (PARADIM), Cornell University