Crystals (Aug 2023)

An Operando Study of the Thermal Reduction of BaTiO<sub>3</sub> Crystals: The Nature of the Insulator–Metal Transition of the Surface Layer

  • Christian Rodenbücher,
  • Gustav Bihlmayer,
  • Carsten Korte,
  • Daniel Rytz,
  • Jacek Szade,
  • Kristof Szot

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst13081278
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. 1278

Abstract

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The insulator-to-metal transition upon the thermal reduction of perovskites is a well-known yet not completely understood phenomenon. By combining different surface-sensitive analysis techniques, we analyze the electronic transport properties, electronic structure, and chemical composition during the annealing and cooling of high-quality BaTiO3 single crystals under ultra-high-vacuum conditions. Our results reveal that dislocations in the surface layer of the crystal play a decisive role as they serve as easy reduction sites. In this way, conducting filaments evolve and allow for turning a macroscopic crystal into a state of metallic conductivity upon reduction, although only an extremely small amount of oxygen is released. After annealing at high temperatures, a valence change of the Ti ions in the surface layer occurs, which becomes pronounced upon the quenching of the crystal. This shows that the reduction-induced insulator-to-metal transition is a highly dynamic non-equilibrium process in which resegregation effects in the surface layer take place. Upon cooling to the ferroelectric phase, the metallicity can be preserved, creating a “ferroelectric metal.” Through a nanoscale analysis of the local conductivity and piezoelectricity, we submit that this phenomenon is not a bulk effect but originates from the simultaneous existence of dislocation-based metallic filaments and piezoelectrically active areas, which are spatially separated.

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