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Real-space imaging of polar and elastic nano-textures in thin films via inversion of diffraction data

Authors :
Shao, Ziming
Schnitzer, Noah
Ruf, Jacob
Gorobtsov, Oleg Y.
Dai, Cheng
Goodge, Berit H.
Yang, Tiannan
Nair, Hari
Stoica, Vlad A.
Freeland, John W.
Ruff, Jacob
Chen, Long-Qing
Schlom, Darrell G.
Shen, Kyle M.
Kourkoutis, Lena F.
Singer, Andrej
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Exploiting the emerging nanoscale periodicities in epitaxial, single-crystal thin films is an exciting direction in quantum materials science: confinement and periodic distortions induce novel properties. The structural motifs of interest are ferroelastic, ferroelectric, multiferroic, and, more recently, topologically protected magnetization and polarization textures. A critical step towards heterostructure engineering is understanding their nanoscale structure, best achieved through real-space imaging. X-ray Bragg coherent diffractive imaging visualizes sub-picometer crystalline displacements with tens of nanometers spatial resolution. Yet, it is limited to objects spatially confined in all three dimensions and requires highly coherent, laser-like x-rays. Here we lift the confinement restriction by developing real-space imaging of periodic lattice distortions: we combine an iterative phase retrieval algorithm with unsupervised machine learning to invert the diffuse scattering in conventional x-ray reciprocal-space mapping into real-space images of polar and elastic textures in thin epitaxial films. We first demonstrate our imaging in PbTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices to be consistent with published phase-field model calculations. We then visualize strain-induced ferroelastic domains emerging during the metal-insulator transition in Ca2RuO4 thin films. Instead of homogeneously transforming into a low-temperature structure (like in bulk), the strained Mott insulator splits into nanodomains with alternating lattice constants, as confirmed by cryogenic scanning transmission electron microscopy. Our study reveals the type, size, orientation, and crystal displacement field of the nano-textures. The non-destructive imaging of textures promises to improve models for their dynamics and enable advances in quantum materials and microelectronics.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2211.01506
Document Type :
Working Paper