论文标题
通过原位X射线光电学光谱探测复杂氧化物中的新兴表面和界面特性
Probing Emergent Surface and Interfacial Properties in Complex Oxides via in situ X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy
论文作者
论文摘要
在过去的二十年中,复杂的氧化物界面上的紧急行为驱动了氧化物薄膜群社区的大部分研究。在散装材料不会表现出所需的特性的情况下,已设计了用于旋转型,拓扑量子计算和高速电子产品的潜在应用的界面。薄膜生长的进步使这些接口的合成成为可能,而X射线光电子光谱等表面表征工具对于理解这些材料中的表面和界面现象至关重要。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了过去5 - 10年来氧化物领域的主要研究,重点是将关键结果与X射线光电光谱研究联系起来。我们描述了合成和光谱法的原位整合如何用于改善膜的生长过程,并在特定量身定制的界面异质结构上进行即时实验。这些研究可以包括确定界面互连,价带比对和界面电荷转移。我们还展示了基于同步加速器的光谱技术的进步如何回答基于实验室系统中无法解决的问题。通过进一步通过原位技术将合成和光谱结合在一起,我们通过仔细设计针对X射线研究进行了优化的薄膜异质结构来讨论现场的未来机会。
Emergent behavior at complex oxide interfaces has driven much of the research in the oxide thin film community for the past twenty years. Interfaces have been engineered for potential applications in spintronics, topological quantum computing, and high-speed electronics in cases where the bulk materials would not exhibit the desired properties. Advances in thin film growth have made the synthesis of these interfaces possible, while surface characterization tools such as X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy have been critical to understanding surface and interfacial phenomena in these materials. In this review we discuss the leading research in the oxide field over the past 5-10 years with a focus on connecting the key results to the X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies that enabled them. We describe how in situ integration of synthesis and spectroscopy can be used to improve the film growth process and to perform immediate experiments on specifically tailored interfacial heterostructures. These studies can include determination of interfacial intermixing, valence band alignment, and interfacial charge transfer. We also show how advances in synchrotron-based spectroscopy techniques have answered questions that cannot be addressed in a lab-based system. By further tying together synthesis and spectroscopy through in situ techniques, we conclude by discussing future opportunities in the field through the careful design of thin film heterostructures that are optimized for X-ray studies.