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Researchers from the MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology of the University of Twente, The Netherlands, together with colleagues from Munich, Berkeley and Davis, have now also demonstrated that at this interface two parallel conductive ‘paths’ are created, just one nanometre apart. That is not only a breakthrough in our understanding of the phenomenon, it also opens up possibilities for new forms of nanoelectronics. The researchers have published their findings in Physical Review Letters.
The researchers from the University of Twente had earlier demonstrated that two non-conductive metal oxides could become conductive at the exact point where they come into contact, and that non-magnetic metal oxides 'suddenly' become magnetic at their interface, for example in the combination of strontium titanate and lanthanum aluminate. When these two complex oxides come into contact, various ions are present on both crystal interfaces, all with their own charges. When the two oxides come into contact, a rearrangement of the charge, known as electronic reconstruction, takes place.
At the point where the electrons are more numerous, these electrons can now conduct electricity. At the same time, it would be expected that holes - positive charge carriers - would be created elsewhere in the structure, where the original electrons were located. The new calculations and experiments have now shown that these holes do indeed exist, and that the holes and the electrons move in parallel to each other, with a space of just one nanometre between them. This is not only a breakthrough in the understanding of conduction at the interface, it also opens up the way for new applications that are not yet possible in current semi-conductor electronics. One exciting possibility, for example, is that interaction might also occur in these conductive layers, which are so close together, with new particles and quantum states as a result.
Read the article here.
The researchers from the University of Twente had earlier demonstrated that two non-conductive metal oxides could become conductive at the exact point where they come into contact, and that non-magnetic metal oxides 'suddenly' become magnetic at their interface, for example in the combination of strontium titanate and lanthanum aluminate. When these two complex oxides come into contact, various ions are present on both crystal interfaces, all with their own charges. When the two oxides come into contact, a rearrangement of the charge, known as electronic reconstruction, takes place.
At the point where the electrons are more numerous, these electrons can now conduct electricity. At the same time, it would be expected that holes - positive charge carriers - would be created elsewhere in the structure, where the original electrons were located. The new calculations and experiments have now shown that these holes do indeed exist, and that the holes and the electrons move in parallel to each other, with a space of just one nanometre between them. This is not only a breakthrough in the understanding of conduction at the interface, it also opens up the way for new applications that are not yet possible in current semi-conductor electronics. One exciting possibility, for example, is that interaction might also occur in these conductive layers, which are so close together, with new particles and quantum states as a result.
Read the article here.