posted on 2018-01-10, 00:00authored byLei Zhang, Yakun Yuan, Jason Lapano, Matthew Brahlek, Shiming Lei, Bernd Kabius, Venkatraman Gopalan, Roman Engel-Herbert
Strain engineering
of thin films is a conventionally employed approach
to enhance material properties and to energetically prefer ground
states that would otherwise not be attainable. Controlling strain
states in perovskite oxide thin films is usually accomplished through
coherent epitaxy by using lattice-mismatched substrates with similar
crystal structures. However, the limited choice of suitable oxide
substrates makes certain strain states experimentally inaccessible
and a continuous tuning impossible. Here, we report a strategy to
continuously tune epitaxial strains in perovskite films grown on Si(001)
by utilizing the large difference of thermal expansion coefficients
between the film and the substrate. By establishing an adsorption-controlled
growth window for SrTiO3 thin films on Si using hybrid
molecular beam epitaxy, the magnitude of strain can be solely attributed
to thermal expansion mismatch, which only depends on the difference
between growth and room temperature. Second-harmonic generation measurements
revealed that structure properties of SrTiO3 films could
be tuned by this method using films with different strain states.
Our work provides a strategy to generate continuous strain states
in oxide/semiconductor pseudomorphic buffer structures that could
help achieve desired material functionalities.