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Adiabatic small polaron hopping and spin-polarized tunneling in perovskite oxides

Posted on:2001-11-20Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Stanford UniversityCandidate:Worledge, Daniel ChristopherFull Text:PDF
GTID:2460390014952789Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis is comprised of two distinct parts, unified in their focus on the transport properties of perovskite oxides.; The occurrence of colossal magnetoresistance and metal-insulator transitions in the manganites has challenged physicists to understand the transport properties of these materials. Part I reports on the epitaxial growth and properties of La1−xCaxMnO3 thin films deposited by pulsed laser ablation, and explains their high temperature conduction mechanism. Conductivity measurements from 300 K to 1200 K of La1−xCa xMnO3 thin films, with doping from x = 0 to x = 1, show that the entire doping range fits the adiabatic small polaron model. Furthermore the x dependence of the conductivity prefactor explicitly shows the effects of on-site coulomb repulsion, i.e. a polaron can not hop into an occupied site. Instead of increasing monotonically as more carriers are introduced, the conductivity prefactor starts to decrease at x = 0.2 and, as expected for Hubbard band splitting, is reduced to almost zero when the lattice is full.; The failure of colossal magnetoresistance materials to produce large room temperature results has led to a search for highly spin-polarized materials to be used in spin dependent tunneling devices. Part II reports on the growth of reproducible La2/3Sr1/3MnO3/SrTiO 3/Al tunnel junctions with high quality gap characteristics for spin-polarization measurements. I analyzed the spin polarized tunneling data in terms of numerical solutions to Maki's equations which include the effects of orbital depairing, the Zeeman splitting of the spin states, and spin-orbit scattering. I show that there are two solutions to these equations, and identify the correct solution. High quality fits to the data with these solutions yield a La 2/3Sr1/3MnO3 spin-polarization of P = +71.5 ± 1.0%. I also discuss my spin-polarized tunneling measurements on SrRuO 3. In contrast to all other materials measured with this technique, I find the spin-polarization to be negative, P = −9.5 ± 0.4%. This should make it possible to perform a test of the generalized Julliere model for a negatively spin-polarized electrode, by measuring the magnetoresistance of a La2/3Sr1/3MnO3/SrTiO3/SrRuO 3 tunnel junction. The generalized Julliere theory predicts it should be inverse.
Keywords/Search Tags:Spin-polarized, Tunneling, Mno, Polaron
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