ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
October 2017
A radical-enhanced atomic layer deposition (RE-ALD) process was developed for growing ferrimagnetic CoFeO thin films. By utilizing bis(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionato) cobalt(II), tris(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionato) iron(III), and atomic oxygen as the metal and oxidation sources, respectively, amorphous and stoichiometric CoFeO films were deposited onto SrTiO (001) substrates at 200 °C. The RE-ALD growth rate obtained for CoFeO is ∼2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLarge scale, cost-effective processing of metal oxide thin films is critical for the fabrication of many novel thin film electronics. To date, however, most of the reported solution-based techniques require either extended thermal anneals or additional synthetic steps. Here we report mist chemical vapor deposition as a solution-based, readily scalable, and open-air method to produce high-quality polycrystalline metal oxide thin films.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElementary particles such as electrons or photons are frequent subjects of wave-nature-driven investigations, unlike collective excitations such as phonons. The demonstration of wave-particle crossover, in terms of macroscopic properties, is crucial to the understanding and application of the wave behaviour of matter. We present an unambiguous demonstration of the theoretically predicted crossover from diffuse (particle-like) to specular (wave-like) phonon scattering in epitaxial oxide superlattices, manifested by a minimum in lattice thermal conductivity as a function of interface density.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is a growing need for biolabels that can be used in both optical and electron microscopies, are non-cytotoxic, and do not photobleach. Such biolabels could enable targeted nanoscale imaging of sub-cellular structures, and help to establish correlations between conjugation-delivered biomolecules and function. Here we demonstrate a sub-cellular multi-modal imaging methodology that enables localization of inert particulate probes, consisting of nanodiamonds having fluorescent nitrogen-vacancy centers.
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