Epitaxial ferromagnetic manganite films have been sputtered on bicrystal substrates. Their magnetoresistance was measured as a function of magnetic field and temperature. The grain boundary magnetoresistance at low temperature is separated from the intrinsic magnetoresistance near the Curie temperature. The grain boundary magnetoresistance peaks at about 100 Oe and saturates at about 2 kOe. For a La0.8Sr0.2MnO3 film with a grain boundary angle θ=36.8° a field independent component r0=4.1×10−6 Ω cm2 was separated from a field-dependent component which has its maximum rH=2.3×10−6 Ω cm2 for H of order the coercive field.
Epitaxial ferromagnetic La0.8Sr0.2MnO3−δ films have been sputtered on SrTiO3 bicrystal substrates. Etched patterns crossing the bicrystal grain boundary are compared with identical patterns not crossing it. The films were annealed at different conditions and their magnetoresistance measured as a function of temperature T and of in plane magnetic field H strength and direction. Annealing at 900 °C was found to modify the grain boundary and to increase its magnetoresistance. For H=±80 Oe parallel to the grain boundary and T=32 K narrow magnetoresistance peaks of 60% height are measured. They are interpreted in the frame of an in plane magnetotunneling structure.
We have observed intrinsic Josephson effects for current flow perpendicular to the CuO2 planes in HTSC thin films. Tl-Ba-Ca-Cu-O thin films were deposited on step edges in LaAlO3 substrates. Due to the special preparation process, microbridges across such steps act as stacks of intrinsic Josephson junctions with current flow perpendicular to the CuO2 planes (STEP STACK junctions). Up to 130 individual junctions could be observed exhibiting high IcRN products up to 26 mV per junction. We observed ac-Josephson effects as Shapiro steps and in microwave emission experiments. At low temperatures sharp emission peaks were detected at frequencies of 11.3 and 24.2 GHz. Broad emission peaks from the whole stack were observed at temperatures close to Tc.
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