Transport, magnetic, and structural properties of La$_{0.7}$Ce$_{0.3}$MnO$_3$ thin films. Evidence for hole-doping
R. Werner, C. Raisch, V. Leca, V. Ion, S. Bals, G. Van Tendeloo, T., Chass\'e, R. Kleiner, D. Koelle

TL;DR
This study investigates cerium-doped manganite thin films, revealing that oxygen content and annealing influence their structural, magnetic, and electronic properties, with evidence supporting hole-doping as the dominant charge carrier mechanism.
Contribution
It provides comprehensive analysis combining XRD, TEM, XPS, and XAS data to demonstrate hole-doping in Ce-doped manganite films and clarifies the effects of oxygen content and film thickness.
Findings
Oxygen annealing increases metal-insulator transition temperature.
Hall measurements confirm holes as dominant charge carriers.
XAS indicates Mn valence shift from 2+ to 4+ with increased oxygen content.
Abstract
Cerium-doped manganite thin films were grown epitaxially by pulsed laser deposition at C and oxygen pressure Pa and were subjected to different annealing steps. According to x-ray diffraction (XRD) data, the formation of CeO as a secondary phase could be avoided for Pa. However, transmission electron microscopy shows the presence of CeO nanoclusters, even in those films which appear to be single phase in XRD. With O annealing, the metal-to-insulator transition temperature increases, while the saturation magnetization decreases and stays well below the theoretical value for electron-doped LaCeMnO with mixed Mn/Mn valences. The same trend is observed with decreasing film thickness from 100 to 20 nm, indicating a higher oxygen content for thinner films. Hall measurements on a film which shows a…
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