RESUMO
Metal oxide nanoparticles exhibit outstanding catalytic properties, believed to be related to the presence of oxygen vacancies at the particle's surface. However, little quantitative information is known about concentrations of point defects inside and at surfaces of these nanoparticles, due to the challenges in achieving an atomically resolved experimental access. By employing off-axis electron holography, we demonstrate, using MgO nanoparticles as an example, a methodology that discriminates between mobile charge induced by electron beam irradiation and immobile charge associated with deep traps induced by point defects as well as distinguishes between bulk and surface point defects. Counting the immobile charge provides a quantification of the concentration of F2+ centers induced by oxygen vacancies at the MgO nanocube surfaces.
Assuntos
Holografia , Nanopartículas Metálicas , Elétrons , Holografia/métodos , Óxido de Magnésio , Óxidos , OxigênioRESUMO
We report a magnetic transition region in La_{0.7}Sr_{0.3}MnO_{3} with gradually changing magnitude of magnetization, but no rotation, stable at all temperatures below T_{C}. Spatially resolved magnetization, composition and Mn valence data reveal that the magnetic transition region is induced by a subtle Mn composition change, leading to charge transfer at the interface due to carrier diffusion and drift. The electrostatic shaping of the magnetic transition region is mediated by the Mn valence, which affects both magnetization by Mn^{3+}-Mn^{4+} double exchange interaction and free carrier concentration.
Assuntos
Magnetismo , Eletricidade Estática , TemperaturaRESUMO
High-temperature superconductive (SC) cuprates exhibit not only a SC phase, but also competing orders, suppressing superconductivity. Charge order (CO) has been recognized as an important competing order, but its microscopic spatial interplay with SC phase as well as the interlayer coupling in CO and SC phases remain elusive, despite being essential for understanding the physical mechanisms of competing orders and hence superconductivity. Here we report the achievement of direct real-space imaging with atomic-scale resolution of cryogenically cleaved YBa2Cu3O6.81 using cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy. CO nanodomains are found embedded in the SC phase with a proximity-like boundary region characterized by mutual suppression of CO and superconductivity. Furthermore, SC coherence as well as CO occur on both CuO chain and plane layers, revealing carrier transport and density of states mixing between layers. The CO antiphase correlation along the c direction suggests a dominance of Coulomb repulsion over Josephson tunneling between adjacent layers.
RESUMO
Photodriven dipole reordering of the intercalated organic molecules in halide perovskites has been suggested to be a critical degree of freedom, potentially affecting physical properties, device performance, and stability of hybrid perovskite-based optoelectronic devices. However, thus far a direct atomically resolved dipole mapping under device operation condition, that is, illumination, is lacking. Here, we map simultaneously the molecule dipole orientation pattern and the electrostatic potential with atomic resolution using photoexcited cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy. Our experimental observations demonstrate that a photodriven molecule dipole reordering, initiated by a photoexcited separation of electron-hole pairs in spatially displaced orbitals, leads to a fundamental reshaping of the potential landscape in halide perovskites, creating separate one-dimensional transport channels for holes and electrons. We anticipate that analogous light-induced polarization order transitions occur in bulk and are at the origin of the extraordinary efficiencies of organometal halide perovskite-based solar cells as well as could reconcile apparently contradictory materials' properties.