grow as a tetragonal structure with a large c/a ratio (≈1.25) when the compressive epitaxial strain exceeds ≈4.5%, e.g., when grown on LaAlO 3 (LAO). [29] In previous work on BFO-CFO nanocomposites, (001)-oriented pseudocubic substrates were typically used, and there is little work on nanocomposites grown with (110) and (111) orientations. [21,31,32] The CFO nanopillars in nanocomposites grown on (110) and (111) substrates appear as tent-like structures and triangular prisms, respectively, in contrast to the rectangular pillars obtained on the (001)-oriented substrates. Moreover, BFO films grown on (110)-oriented LAO exhibit a uniaxial in-plane strain instead of the biaxial strain found in the (001) orientation, [33,34] and the strain along the [110] in-plane direction is relaxed even in BFO films with a thickness as low as ≈10 nm. BFO-CFO nanocomposite films on (110)-oriented LAO also exhibit strain in the out-of-plane direction of both phases that differs from the strain state obtained in single-phase films. A large out-of-plane strain significantly modifies the magnetism, magnetic anisotropy, and magnetotransport properties in vertical nanocomposite films. [10] In this article, we show that the BFO in a BFO-CFO nanocomposite grown on LAO (110) substrates forms different phases, rhombohedral-like (R-like) or tetragonal-like (T-like), depending on the thickness of the film and the effects of the vertical lattice strain between the BFO and CFO. A variety of domain structures were observed in the BFO matrix, and thickness-dependent magnetic properties of the CFO are interpreted in terms of the film strain and the shape of the CFO. These results demonstrate how the properties of nanocomposites including in-plane anisotropy can be engineered on a (110) substrate.
Results and DiscussionA series of epitaxial BFO-CFO nanocomposite thin films with thickness of 25 to 75 nm was deposited on single-crystal LAO (110). The LAO is a rhombohedrally distorted perovskite at room temperature, with a pseudocubic lattice parameter of 3.787 Å. The (110)-oriented LAO substrate therefore has a rectangular surface net with dimensions 5.355 Å along the pseudocubic [110] sub direction and 3.787 Å along the [001] sub direction. The films were grown using pulsed laser deposition (PLD) as described in the Experimental Section. A conductive La(Sr 0.33 ,Mn 0.67 )O 3 (LSMO) layer ≈8 nm thick was first epitaxially grown on the substrate, followed by deposition of the A strain-driven BiFeO 3 (BFO) tetragonal to rhombohedral phase transition is demonstrated in self-assembled BiFeO 3 -CoFe 2 O 4 (BFO-CFO) nanocomposites on LaAlO 3 (110)-oriented substrates with varying thickness. The CFO forms parallel nanoscale fin-shaped structures within a BFO matrix. Out-of-plane lattice strain from the BFO/CFO interfaces stabilizes the BFO rhombohedrallike phase. The BFO exhibits a range of ferroelectric textures including stripe domains and centered domain arrangements, and the magnetic anisotropy of CFO shows a thickness-dependent reorientation.