Hard x-ray photoemission and density functional theory study of the internal electric field in SrTiO3/LaAlO3 oxide heterostructures
E. Slooten, Zhicheng Zhong, H. J. A. Molegraaf, P. D. Eerkes, S. de, Jong, F. Massee, E. van Heumen, M. K. Kruize, S. Wenderich, J. E. Kleibeuker,, M. Gorgoi, H. Hilgenkamp, A. Brinkman, M. Huijben, G. Rijnders, D. H. A., Blank, G. Koster, P. J. Kelly, and M. S. Golden

TL;DR
This study combines experimental hard x-ray photoemission and density functional theory to investigate the internal electric field and electronic structure in SrTiO3/LaAlO3 heterostructures, revealing complexities beyond simple charge transfer models.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the internal electric fields and charge transfer mechanisms in oxide heterostructures, challenging the simple electron transfer model with experimental and theoretical evidence.
Findings
Ti 3d states occupy at two unit cells of LaAlO3
LaAlO3 core levels shift with thickness, but less than expected
Oxygen vacancies can reverse the internal electric field
Abstract
A combined experimental and theoretical investigation of the electronic structure of the archetypal oxide heterointerface system LaAlO3 on SrTiO3 is presented. High-resolution, hard x-ray photoemission is used to uncover the occupation of Ti 3d states and the relative energetic alignment - and hence internal electric fields - within the LaAlO3 layer. Firstly, the Ti 2p core level spectra clearly show occupation of Ti 3d states already for two unit cells of LaAlO3. Secondly, the LaAlO3 core levels were seen to shift to lower binding energy as the LaAlO3 overlayer thickness, n, was increased - agreeing with the expectations from the canonical electron transfer model for the emergence of conductivity at the interface. However, not only is the energy offset of only 300meV between n=2 (insulating interface) and n=6 (metallic interface) an order of magnitude smaller than the simple…
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