Published September 16, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Coupling Charge and Topological Reconstructions at Polar Oxide Interfaces

  • 1. Delft University of Technology
  • 2. Polish Academy of Sciences
  • 3. University of Antwerp
  • 4. Royal Dutch Shell
  • 5. CNR-SPIN
  • 6. University of Geneva

Description

In oxide heterostructures, different materials are integrated into a single artificial crystal, resulting in a breaking of inversion symmetry across the heterointerfaces. A notable example is the interface between polar and nonpolar materials, where valence discontinuities lead to otherwise inaccessible charge and spin states. This approach paved the way for the discovery of numerous unconventional properties absent in the bulk constituents. However, control of the geometric structure of the electronic wave functions in correlated oxides remains an open challenge. Here, we create heterostructures consisting of ultrathin SrRuO3, an itinerant ferromagnet hosting momentum-space sources of Berry curvature, and LaAlO3, a polar wide-band-gap insulator. Transmission electron microscopy reveals an atomically sharp LaO/RuO2/SrO interface configuration, leading to excess charge being pinned near the LaAlO3/SrRuO3 interface. We demonstrate through magneto-optical characterization, theoretical calculations and transport measurements that the real-space charge reconstruction drives a reorganization of the topological charges in the band structure, thereby modifying the momentum-space Berry curvature in SrRuO3. Our results illustrate how the topological and magnetic features of oxides can be manipulated by engineering charge discontinuities at oxide interfaces.

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Coupling Charge and Topological Reconstructions at Polar Oxide Interfaces.pdf

Additional details

Funding

ESTEEM3 – Enabling Science and Technology through European Electron Microscopy 823717
European Commission