High-performance liquid-like thermoelectrics have attracted global renewed attention since the paradigm of ‘phonon-liquid electron-crystal’ was proposed in 2012. As one of the most typical liquid-like thermoelectric materials, Cu2Se-based compounds have...
Strongly
correlated perovskite oxides exhibit a plethera of intriguing
phenomena and stimulate a great potential for multifunctional device
applications. Utilizing tunable uniaxial strain, rather than biaxial
or anisotropic strain, delivered from the crystallography of a single
crystal substrate to modify the ground state of strongly correlated
perovskite oxides has rarely been addressed for phase-space control.
Here, we show that the physical properties of La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 (LCMO) films are remarkably different depending
on the crystallographic orientations of the orthorhombic NdGaO3 (NGO) substrates. More importantly, the antiferromagnetic
charge-ordered insulating (COI) phase induced in the (100) or (001)-oriented
LCMO films can be dramatically promoted (or suppressed) by a uniaxial
tensile (or compressive) bending stress along the in-plane [010] direction.
By contrast, the COI phase is nearly unaffected along the other transverse
in-plane directions. Results from scanning transmission electron microscopy
reveal that the (100)- or (001)-oriented LCMO films are uniaxially
tensile strained along the [010] direction, while the LCMO/NGO(010)
and LCMO/NGO(110) films remaining as a bulklike ferromagnetic metallic
state exhibit a different strain state. Density functional theory
calculations further reveal that the cooperatively increased Jahn–Teller
distortion and charge ordering may be indispensible for the inducing
and promoting of the COI phase. These findings provide a path to understand
the correlation between local and extended structural distortions
imparted by coherent epitaxy and the electronic states for quantum
phase engineering.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.