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. 2013:3:1975.
doi: 10.1038/srep01975.

Giant photovoltaic effects driven by residual polar field within unit-cell-scale LaAlO₃ films on SrTiO₃

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Giant photovoltaic effects driven by residual polar field within unit-cell-scale LaAlO₃ films on SrTiO₃

Haixing Liang et al. Sci Rep. 2013.

Abstract

For polar/nonpolar heterostructures, Maxwell's theory dictates that the electric potential in the polar components will increase divergently with the film thickness. For LaAlO₃/SrTiO₃, a conceptually intriguing route, termed charge reconstruction, has been proposed to avert such "polar catastrophe". The existence of a polar potential in LaAlO₃ is a prerequisite for the validity of the charge reconstruction picture, yet to date, its direct measurement remains a major challenge. Here we establish unambiguously the existence of the residual polar potential in ultrathin LaAlO₃ films on SrTiO₃, using a novel photovoltaic device design as an effective probe. The measured lower bound of the residual polar potential is 1.0 V. Such a direct observation of the giant residual polar potential within the unit-cell-scale LaAlO₃ films amounts to a definitive experimental evidence for the charge reconstruction picture, and also points to new technological significance of oxide heterostructures in photovoltaic and sensing devices with atomic-scale control.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Band diagram and PV effect.
(a) Schematic band diagrams for an LAO/STO heterostructure, an Au/LAO/STO heterostructure, and an Au/LAO/STO heterostructure under UV illumination with photon energy larger than the LAO gap, respectively. The LAO thickness is assumed to be equal to or larger than 4 uc. The dashed lines refer to the Fermi level in the LAO. (b) Schematic of the PV effect across the LAO overlayer in an Au/LAO/STO heterostructure. (c) IV curves between the surface Au electrode and the LAO/STO interface with an LAO thickness of 5 uc without and with 6.7-eV light illumination.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Detailed IV characteristics for LAO film thickness of 5 uc.
(a) Measured Voc and Isc as functions of the lateral size of the Au electrode. (b) Dependence of Voc on the work function of the surface metal contact. (c) IV curves of the q2-DEG at the LAO/STO interface in without and with 6.7-eV light illumination. (d) Voc and Jsc under UV illumination of 6.7 eV and 3.4 eV with the same incident photon flux (2.7 × 1016 cm−2s−1, which corresponds to 29 mWcm−2 for the 6.7-eV light and 15 mWcm−2 for the 3.4-eV light). The Voc and Jsc measured with a solar simulator (AM 1.5 G filter at 150 mWcm−2) are also shown. The dotted line in (d) refers to the LAO bandgap.
Figure 3
Figure 3. PV effect dependent on light intensity and LAO thickness.
(a) Voc as a function of the light intensity under 6.7-eV light illumination for the atmospheric-oxygen-pressure annealed LAO samples with thickness of 5 uc. Pt electrodes were adopted for the measurements. (b) Measured Voc as a function of the LAO thickness for both the samples with in-situ annealing (yellow) and with atmospheric-oxygen-pressure annealing (green), respectively. Au electrodes were adopted for the former, while Pt for the latter.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Power supply to an external resistor.
Response of a commercial CdS photoresistor to an on/off-switchable green light source, driven by a prototypical PV device based on a 5-uc-LAO/STO heterostructure.
Figure 5
Figure 5. Sample growth.
(a) RHEED oscillations for the LAO overlayer grown on a STO substrate. The inset shows the RHEED pattern after growth of 5-uc LAO layers. (b) AFM image of a 5-uc LAO overlayer on a STO substrate. The scale bar is 1 μm. (c) XRD pattern near the (001) peak of a LAO/STO heterostructure with the LAO thickness of 75 uc.
Figure 6
Figure 6. Theoretical modeling.
The optimized atomic structures and corresponding layer-resolved density of states (DOS) of the (LAO)5(STO)5.5 and Au4(LAO)5(STO)5.5 slabs, respectively. Zero energy refers to the Fermi level.

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