Influence of the vicinal substrate miscut on the anisotropic two-dimensional electronic transport in Al2O3-SrTiO3 heterostructures
Karsten Wolff, Roland Sch\"afer, Daniel Arnold, Rudolf Schneider,, Matthieu Le Tacon, and Dirk Fuchs

TL;DR
This study examines how the substrate miscut angle influences anisotropic electronic transport in Al2O3-SrTiO3 heterostructures, revealing that surface steps and defects significantly affect resistance and magnetoresistance behaviors.
Contribution
It systematically investigates the effect of substrate miscut angles on 2DES transport properties, highlighting the roles of surface steps, step-bunching, and dislocations in anisotropic conduction.
Findings
Increased miscut angle enhances in-plane resistance anisotropy.
Surface steps and defects influence interfacial scattering and magnetoresistance.
Spin-orbit coupling effects are observed but not strongly correlated with miscut angle.
Abstract
The electrical resistance of the two-dimensional electron system (2DES) which forms at the interface of SrTiO3 (STO)-based heterostructures displays anisotropic transport with respect to the direction of current flow at low temperature. We have investigated the influence of terraces at the surface of STO substrates from which the 2DES are prepared. Such terraces are always present in commercially available STO substrates due to the tolerance of surface preparation which result in small miscut angles of the order of gamma ~ 0.1{\deg} with respect to the surface normal. By a controlled increase of the substrate miscut we could systematically reduce the width of the terraces and thereby increase the density of substrate surface steps. The in-plane anisotropy of the electrical resistance was studied as a function of the miscut angle gamma and found to be mainly related to interfacial…
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