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Epitaxial Thin Film Growth on Recycled SrTiO 3 Substrates Toward Sustainable Processing of Complex Oxides

Complex oxide thin films cover a range of physical properties and multifunctionalities that are critical for logic, memory, and optical devices. Typically, the high-quality epitaxial growth of these complex oxide thin films requires single crystalline oxide substrates such as SrTiO (STO), MgO, LaAlO...

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Published in:Small methods 2024-10, p.e2401148
Main Authors: Shen, Jianan, Quigley, Lizabeth, Barnard, James P, Lu, Ping, Tsai, Benson Kunhung, Zemlyanov, Dmitry, Zhang, Yizhi, Sheng, Xuanyu, Gan, Jeremy, Moceri, Matteo, Hu, Zedong, Huang, Jialong, Shen, Chao, Deitz, Julia, Zhang, Xinghang, Wang, Haiyan
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creator Shen, Jianan
Quigley, Lizabeth
Barnard, James P
Lu, Ping
Tsai, Benson Kunhung
Zemlyanov, Dmitry
Zhang, Yizhi
Sheng, Xuanyu
Gan, Jeremy
Moceri, Matteo
Hu, Zedong
Huang, Jialong
Shen, Chao
Deitz, Julia
Zhang, Xinghang
Wang, Haiyan
description Complex oxide thin films cover a range of physical properties and multifunctionalities that are critical for logic, memory, and optical devices. Typically, the high-quality epitaxial growth of these complex oxide thin films requires single crystalline oxide substrates such as SrTiO (STO), MgO, LaAlO , a-Al O and many others. Recent successes in transferring these complex oxides as free-standing films not only offer great opportunities in integrating complex oxides on other devices, but also present enormous opportunities in recycling the deposited substrates after transfer for cost-effective and sustainable processing of complex oxide thin films. In this work, the surface modification effects introduced on the recycled STO are investigated, and their impacts on the microstructure and properties of subsequently grown epitaxial oxide thin films are assessed and compared with those grown on the pristine substrates. Detailed analyses using high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy and geometric phase analysis demonstrate distinct strain states on the surfaces of the recycled STO versus the pristine substrates, suggesting a pre-strain state in the recycled STO substrates due to the previous deposition layer. These findings offer opportunities in growing highly mismatched oxide films on the recycled STO substrates with enhanced physical properties. Specifically, yttrium iron garnet (Y Fe O ) films grown on recycled STO present different ferromagnetic responses compared to that on the pristine substrates, underscoring the effects of surface modification. The study demonstrates the feasibility of reuse and redeposition using recycled substrates. Via careful handling and preparation, high-quality epitaxial thin films can be grown on recycled substrates with comparable or even better structural and physical properties toward sustainable process of complex oxide devices.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/smtd.202401148
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Typically, the high-quality epitaxial growth of these complex oxide thin films requires single crystalline oxide substrates such as SrTiO (STO), MgO, LaAlO , a-Al O and many others. Recent successes in transferring these complex oxides as free-standing films not only offer great opportunities in integrating complex oxides on other devices, but also present enormous opportunities in recycling the deposited substrates after transfer for cost-effective and sustainable processing of complex oxide thin films. In this work, the surface modification effects introduced on the recycled STO are investigated, and their impacts on the microstructure and properties of subsequently grown epitaxial oxide thin films are assessed and compared with those grown on the pristine substrates. Detailed analyses using high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy and geometric phase analysis demonstrate distinct strain states on the surfaces of the recycled STO versus the pristine substrates, suggesting a pre-strain state in the recycled STO substrates due to the previous deposition layer. These findings offer opportunities in growing highly mismatched oxide films on the recycled STO substrates with enhanced physical properties. Specifically, yttrium iron garnet (Y Fe O ) films grown on recycled STO present different ferromagnetic responses compared to that on the pristine substrates, underscoring the effects of surface modification. The study demonstrates the feasibility of reuse and redeposition using recycled substrates. 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