AI Article Synopsis

  • - Recent advancements in controlling electrical doping in cuprate superconductors have largely relied on using electric fields from ferroelectric materials or gating, but these methods have limitations such as requiring thin layers and high electric fields.
  • - This study explores a new method of oxygen doping in YBaCuO superconducting bridges through current-induced oxygen migration, using a simpler setup that avoids complex fabrication and electronics.
  • - The research utilizes optical and scanning electron microscopy to visualize oxygen movement, demonstrating that the process is influenced by the applied current, which could lead to better control of oxygen content for studying complex phase diagrams and creating new device designs.

Article Abstract

The past years have witnessed major advancements in all-electrical doping control on cuprates. In the vast majority of cases, the tuning of charge carrier density has been achieved electric field effect by means of either a ferroelectric polarization or using a dielectric or electrolyte gating. Unfortunately, these approaches are constrained to rather thin superconducting layers and require large electric fields in order to ensure sizable carrier modulations. In this work, we focus on the investigation of oxygen doping in an extended region through current-stimulated oxygen migration in YBaCuO superconducting bridges. The underlying methodology is rather simple and avoids sophisticated nanofabrication process steps and complex electronics. A patterned multiterminal transport bridge configuration allows us to electrically assess the directional counterflow of oxygen atoms and vacancies. Importantly, the emerging propagating front of current-dependent doping δ is probed by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. The resulting imaging techniques, together with photoinduced conductivity and Raman scattering investigations, reveal an inhomogeneous oxygen vacancy distribution with a controllable propagation speed permitting us to estimate the oxygen diffusivity. These findings provide direct evidence that the microscopic mechanism at play in electrical doping of cuprates involves diffusion of oxygen atoms with the applied current. The resulting fine control of the oxygen content would permit a systematic study of complex phase diagrams and the design of electrically addressable devices.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.0c04492DOI Listing

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