La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 thin films having different thicknesses were grown by pulsed laser deposition with in situ reflection high energy electron diffraction diagnostics on LaAlO3 substrates. The mismatch between film and substrate gives rise to an in-plane compressive biaxial strain, which partially relaxes in films thicker than 30 unit cells. Accordingly, the ratio between the out-of-plane and the in-plane lattice parameter c/a varies between 1.06 fully strained and 1.03 partially relaxed. In-plane compressive strain favors the stabilization of the 3z2−r2 orbitals chain-type antiferromagnetic phase, thus giving rise to a sizeable x-ray absorption linear dichroism signal. The shape of the linear dichroism depends weakly on the c/a ratio, while its intensity strongly increases with c/a. At the same time, the metal-insulator transition temperature shifts from about 360 K towards lower temperatures with decreasing thickness, eventually reaching an insulating state for the 30 unit cells film. Low-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance spectra show a decrease of the MnDE doubleexchange metallic contribution with decreasing the thickness, which becomes negligible in the 30 unit cells thick film. The experimental results demonstrate a strain driven competition between two stable phases: the orbital ordered chain-type insulating antiferromagnetic and the orbital disordered metallic ferromagnetic. For intermediate values of the epitaxial strain the local minimum state of the system lies in a gap region between the two stable phases. Such a region has glassy characteristics with coexisting clusters of the two phases. The strain is used as a driving force to span the glassy region.

Strain-induced phase separation in La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 thin films

GHIRINGHELLI, GIACOMO CLAUDIO;DALLERA, CLAUDIA;BRAICOVICH, LUCIO;
2006-01-01

Abstract

La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 thin films having different thicknesses were grown by pulsed laser deposition with in situ reflection high energy electron diffraction diagnostics on LaAlO3 substrates. The mismatch between film and substrate gives rise to an in-plane compressive biaxial strain, which partially relaxes in films thicker than 30 unit cells. Accordingly, the ratio between the out-of-plane and the in-plane lattice parameter c/a varies between 1.06 fully strained and 1.03 partially relaxed. In-plane compressive strain favors the stabilization of the 3z2−r2 orbitals chain-type antiferromagnetic phase, thus giving rise to a sizeable x-ray absorption linear dichroism signal. The shape of the linear dichroism depends weakly on the c/a ratio, while its intensity strongly increases with c/a. At the same time, the metal-insulator transition temperature shifts from about 360 K towards lower temperatures with decreasing thickness, eventually reaching an insulating state for the 30 unit cells film. Low-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance spectra show a decrease of the MnDE doubleexchange metallic contribution with decreasing the thickness, which becomes negligible in the 30 unit cells thick film. The experimental results demonstrate a strain driven competition between two stable phases: the orbital ordered chain-type insulating antiferromagnetic and the orbital disordered metallic ferromagnetic. For intermediate values of the epitaxial strain the local minimum state of the system lies in a gap region between the two stable phases. Such a region has glassy characteristics with coexisting clusters of the two phases. The strain is used as a driving force to span the glassy region.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/251523
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