Pulsed laser deposition growth of heteroepitaxial YBa2Cu3O7/La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 superlattices on NdGaO3 and Sr0.7La0.3Al0.65Ta0.35O3 substrates
V. K. Malik, I. Marozau, S. Das, B. Doggett, D. K., Satapathy, M. A. Uribe-Laverde, N. Biskup, M. Varela, C. W., Schneider, C. Marcelot, J. Stahn, C. Bernhard

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the growth of high-quality YBa2Cu3O7/La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 superlattices on lattice-matched substrates using pulsed laser deposition, revealing detailed structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of the heterostructures.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the growth dynamics, interface structure, and physical properties of YBCO/LCMO superlattices on alternative substrates, avoiding strain effects seen with SrTiO3.
Findings
Layers are flat, continuous, and have sharp interfaces.
The first YBCO monolayer lacks the CuO chain layer.
Interfacial CuO2 bilayers remain conducting and show signs of superconductivity.
Abstract
Heteroepitaxial superlattices of [YBa2Cu3O7(n)/ La0.67Ca0.33MnO3(m)]x, where n and m are the number of YBCO and LCMO monolayers and x the number of bilayer repetitions, have been grown with pulsed laser deposition on NdGaO3 (110) and Sr0.7La0.3Al0.65Ta0.35O3 (LSAT) (001). These substrates are well lattice matched with YBCO and LCMO and, unlike the commonly used SrTiO3, they do not give rise to complex and uncontrolled strain effects due to structural transitions at low temperature. The growth dynamics and the structure have been studied in-situ with reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED) and ex-situ with scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), x-ray diffraction, and neutron reflectometry. The individual layers are found to be flat and continuous over long lateral distances with sharp and coherent interfaces and with a well-defined thickness of the individual…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
