APL Materials (Apr 2021)

DyFe2O4: A new trigonal rare-earth ferrite grown by molecular-beam epitaxy

  • Rachel A. Steinhardt,
  • Charles M. Brooks,
  • Gabriela C. Correa,
  • Megan E. Holtz,
  • Ramamoorthy Ramesh,
  • David A. Muller,
  • Julia A. Mundy,
  • Darrell G. Schlom

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0038211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 041106 – 041106-7

Abstract

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Using epitaxial stabilization, we synthesized single-phase (001)-oriented thin films of DyFe2O4+x on (111) MgAl2O4 substrates by molecular-beam epitaxy. The metastable DyFe2O4 polymorph formed is isostructural to known trigonal ferrimagnetic RFe2O4 phases with space group R3̄m, where R = Ho to Lu. The epitaxial DyFe2O4 thin films have two in-plane orientation relationships: [100] DyFe2O4 || 211̄ MgAl2O4 plus a twin variant related by a 60° in-plane rotation. DyFe2O4 is not bulk stable and has never been synthesized before. Indeed, it has been predicted to be on the edge energetically of what may be possible to stabilize. The fact that the RFe2O4 phase is stable for all elements leading up to dysprosium (Ho–Lu) leads us to believe that DyFe2O4 could be a “remnant metastable phase,” one which, given the right thermodynamic conditions, could become the lowest free energy phase. We find that although we are able to get structurally very close to R3̄m DyFe2O4, the films are not stoichiometric as they have an increased c lattice parameter, indicative of extra oxygen as is sometimes seen in other RFe2O4 phases. The unintended surplus oxygen opens questions regarding what may be achievable using such tricks as epitaxial stabilization to access metastable phases and whether this indeed constitutes “remnant metastability.”