Phase transitions via selective elemental vacancy engineering in complex oxide thin films
Sang A Lee, Hoidong Jeong, Sungmin Woo, Jae-Yeol Hwang, Si-Young Choi,, Sung-Dae Kim, Minseok Cho, Seulki Roh, Hosung Yu, Jungseek Hwang, Sung Wng, Kim, and Woo Seok Choi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how selective vacancy engineering in complex oxide thin films enables independent control of structural and electronic phase transitions, advancing the understanding and customization of these materials.
Contribution
It introduces a method to selectively create and control different elemental vacancies in SrTiO3 thin films, revealing their distinct roles in phase transitions.
Findings
Oxygen vacancies induce metal-insulator transitions.
Sr vacancies cause cubic-to-tetragonal structural transition.
Vacancy control decouples structural and electronic phase changes.
Abstract
Defect engineering has brought about a unique level of control for Si-based semiconductors, leading to the optimization of various opto-electronic properties and devices. With regard to perovskite transition metal oxides, oxygen vacancies have been a key ingredient in defect engineering, as they play a central role in determining the crystal field and consequent electronic structure, leading to important electronic and magnetic phase transitions. Therefore, experimental approaches toward understanding the role of defects in complex oxides have been largely limited to controlling oxygen vacancies. In this study, we report on the selective formation of different types of elemental vacancies and their individual roles in determining the atomic and electronic structure of perovskite SrTiO3 (STO) homoepitaxial thin films fabricated by pulsed laser epitaxy. Structural and electronic…
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