AIP Advances (Oct 2020)
Unraveling the electronic structures in different phases of gadolinium sesquioxides performed by electron energy loss spectroscopy
Abstract
The gadolinium sesquioxide (Gd2O3) with its bandgap of ∼5.4 eV and high dielectric permittivity and refractive index has been used widely in optics, magnetic resonance imaging, and high k dielectrics. Electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) reveals spectral features at 13.5 eV and 15 eV, which can be interpreted as surface and volume plasmons, respectively. The unusual surface exciton polariton, with surface resonances associated with excitonic onsets, was also observed at ∼7.5 eV. Because of the differences in electronic structures between the cubic and the monoclinic phases of Gd2O3, it is straightforward to distinguish the two phases using the low-loss regime and O K-edge as a fingerprint. We further successfully performed EELS and electron diffraction to identify the crystalline phase of a single-crystal Gd2O3 film epitaxially grown on a Si(111) substrate.