SKM 2023 – wissenschaftliches Programm
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MA: Fachverband Magnetismus
MA 6: Focus: Dislocations in Ceramics: Mechanics, Structures and Functionality (joint session KFM/MA)
MA 6.1: Hauptvortrag
Montag, 27. März 2023, 14:30–15:00, POT 51
Formation of conducting channels along of dislocations in SrTiO3 — •Christian Rodenbücher1, Kristof Szot2, Gustav Bihlmayer3, and Carsten Korte1 — 1Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Institute of Energy and Climate Research (IEK-14) — 2University of Silesia, Institute of Physics, 41-500 Chorzów, Poland — 3Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Peter Grünberg Institut (PGI-1), 52425 Jülich, Germany
SrTiO3 has become one of the most extensively studied metal oxides due to its exceptional electronic properties, which hold promising potential for applications in energy conversion and electronics. A key feature of SrTiO3 is that its electronic transport properties are closely related to oxygen nonstoichiometry, which can be manipulated via redox reactions. Our nanoscale investigations on crystals and ceramics employing imaging techniques such as local-conductivity atomic force microscopy (LC-AFM) reveal that the reduction process is highly complex and heterogeneous on the nanoscale. Along extended defects such as dislocations there are easy reduction sites where oxygen vacancies are preferentially generated. In this way, filaments with high conductivity evolve around the dislocations in the originally insulating matrix and act as nanoscale short circuits. Upon application of mechanical stress, these filaments can even be moved through the crystal together with the dislocations. These findings not only can explain failure mechanisms in solid oxide electrolytes, but also raise fundamental questions regarding the mechanisms of electronic transport and superconductivity in self-doped transition metal oxides.