Atomistic Engineering of Phonons in Functional Oxide Heterostructures
Seung Gyo Jeong, Ambrose Seo, and Woo Seok Choi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the atomic-scale engineering of phonons in complex oxide heterostructures, enabling tunable and emergent phonon functionalities for advanced quantum acoustic applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to phonon engineering in complex oxides through atomic-scale heterostructuring, expanding possibilities for quantum device functionalities.
Findings
Tunable phonon modes observed via Raman spectroscopy
Zone-folded acoustic phonons in the THz range
Emergent polar optical phonons from symmetry breaking
Abstract
Engineering of phonons, i.e., collective lattice vibrations in crystals, is essential for manipulating physical properties of materials such as thermal transport, electron-phonon interaction, confinement of lattice vibration, and optical polarization. Most approaches to phonon-engineering have been largely limited to the high-quality heterostructures of typical semiconductors. Yet, artificial engineering of phonons in a variety of materials with functional properties, such as complex oxides, will yield unprecedented applications of coherent tunable phonons in future quantum acoustic devices. In this study, we demonstrate artificial engineering of phonons in the atomic-scale SrRuO3/SrTiO3 superlattices, wherein tunable phonon modes were observed via confocal Raman spectroscopy. In particular, the coherent superlattices led to the backfolding of acoustic phonon dispersion, resulting in…
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