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Electromagnetic Functionalization of Wide-Bandgap Dielectric Oxides by Boron Interstitial Doping

  • Dae Sung Park*
  • , Gregory J. Rees
  • , Haiyuan Wang
  • , Diana Rata
  • , Andrew J. Morris
  • , Igor V. Maznichenko
  • , Sergey Ostanin
  • , Akash Bhatnagar
  • , Chel Jong Choi
  • , Ragnar D.B. Jónsson
  • , Kai Kaufmann
  • , Reza Kashtiban
  • , Marc Walker
  • , Cheng Tien Chiang
  • , Einar B. Thorsteinsson
  • , Zhengdong Luo
  • , In Sung Park
  • , John V. Hanna
  • , Ingrid Mertig
  • , Kathrin Dörr
  • Hafliði P. Gíslason, Chris F. McConville
*Corresponding author for this work
  • Zentrum für Innovationskompetenz SiLi-nano
  • Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
  • University of Warwick
  • Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society
  • University of Birmingham
  • Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics
  • University of Iceland
  • Fraunhofer Center for Silicon Photovoltaics
  • Hanyang University
  • Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

A surge in interest of oxide-based materials is testimony for their potential utility in a wide array of device applications and offers a fascinating landscape for tuning the functional properties through a variety of physical and chemical parameters. In particular, selective electronic/defect doping has been demonstrated to be vital in tailoring novel functionalities, not existing in the bulk host oxides. Here, an extraordinary interstitial doping effect is demonstrated centered around a light element, boron (B). The host matrix is a novel composite system, made from discrete bulk LaAlO3:LaBO3 compounds. The findings show a spontaneous ordering of the interstitial B cations within the host LaAlO3 lattices, and subsequent spin-polarized charge injection into the neighboring cations. This leads to a series of remarkable cation-dominated electrical switching and high-temperature ferromagnetism. Hence, the induced interstitial doping serves to transform a nonmagnetic insulating bulk oxide into a ferromagnetic ionic–electronic conductor. This unique interstitial B doping effect upon its control is proposed to be as a general route for extracting/modifying multifunctional properties in bulk oxides utilized in energy and spin-based applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1802025
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume30
Issue number39
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018.09.26

Keywords

  • first-principle calculations
  • light element interstitial doping
  • oxide composites
  • resistive switching
  • Stoner ferromagnetism

Quacquarelli Symonds(QS) Subject Topics

  • Engineering - Mechanical
  • Materials Science

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