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Strain-mediated high conductivity in ultrathin antiferromagnetic metallic nitrides

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arxiv 2010.09554 v1 pith:LIUGYRRQ submitted 2020-10-19 cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.str-elphysics.app-ph

Strain-mediated high conductivity in ultrathin antiferromagnetic metallic nitrides

classification cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.str-elphysics.app-ph
keywords filmsstrainconductivitytransitionultrathinabilityantiferromagneticcritical
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Strain engineering provides the ability to control the ground states and associated phase transition in the epitaxial films. However, the systematic study of intrinsic characters and their strain dependency in transition-metal nitrides remains challenging due to the difficulty in fabricating the stoichiometric and high-quality films. Here we report the observation of electronic state transition in highly crystalline antiferromagnetic CrN films with strain and reduced dimensionality. Shrinking the film thickness to a critical value of ~ 30 unit cells, a profound conductivity reduction accompanied by unexpected volume expansion is observed in CrN films. The electrical conductivity is observed surprisingly when the CrN layer as thin as single unit cell thick, which is far below the critical thickness of most metallic films. We found that the metallicity of an ultrathin CrN film recovers from an insulating behavior upon the removal of as-grown strain by fabrication of first-ever freestanding nitride films. Both first-principles calculations and linear dichroism measurements reveal that the strain-mediated orbital splitting effectively customizes the relatively small bandgap at the Fermi level, leading to exotic phase transition in CrN. The ability to achieve highly conductive nitride ultrathin films by harness strain-controlling over competing phases can be used for utilizing their exceptional characteristics.

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