Jong Seok Jeong

Find an error

Name: Jeong, Jong Seok
Organization: University of Minnesota , USA
Department: Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
Title: (PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Jong Seok Jeong, Mehmet Topsakal, Peng Xu, Bharat Jalan, Renata M. Wentzcovitch, and K. Andre Mkhoyan
Nano Letters 2016 Volume 16(Issue 11) pp:6816-6822
Publication Date(Web):October 13, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b02532
Perovskite oxides form an eclectic class of materials owing to their structural flexibility in accommodating cations of different sizes and valences. They host well-known point and planar defects, but so far no line defect has been identified other than dislocations. Using analytical scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and ab initio calculations, we have detected and characterized the atomic and electronic structures of a novel line defect in NdTiO3 perovskite. It appears in STEM images as a perovskite cell rotated by 45°. It consists of self-organized Ti–O vacancy lines replaced by Nd columns surrounding a central Ti–O octahedral chain containing Ti4+ ions, as opposed to Ti3+ in the host. The distinct Ti valence in this line defect introduces the possibility of engineering exotic conducting properties in a single preferred direction and tailoring novel desirable functionalities in this Mott insulator.Keywords: DFT; EELS; Line defect; NdTiO3; perovskite; STEM;
Co-reporter:Jong Seok Jeong, Palak Ambwani, Bharat Jalan, Chris Leighton, and K. Andre Mkhoyan
ACS Nano 2013 Volume 7(Issue 5) pp:4487
Publication Date(Web):April 28, 2013
DOI:10.1021/nn401101y
Despite rapid recent progress, controlled dopant incorporation and attainment of high mobility in thin films of the prototypical complex oxide semiconductor SrTiO3 remain problematic. Here, analytical scanning transmission electron microscopy is used to study the local atomic and electronic structure of Nb-doped SrTiO3 both in ideally substitutionally doped bulk single crystals and epitaxial thin films. The films are deposited under conditions that would yield highly stoichiometric undoped SrTiO3, but are nevertheless insulating. The Nb incorporation in such films was found to be highly inhomogeneous on nanoscopic length-scales, with large quantities of what we deduce to be interstitial Nb. Electron energy loss spectroscopy reveals changes in the electronic density of states in Nb-doped SrTiO3 films compared to undoped SrTiO3, but without the clear shift in the Fermi edge seen in bulk single crystal Nb-doped SrTiO3. Analysis of atomic-resolution annular dark-field images allows us to conclude that the interstitial Nb is in the Nb0 state, confirming that it is electrically inactive. We argue that this approach should enable future work establishing the vitally needed relationships between synthesis/processing conditions and electronic properties of Nb-doped SrTiO3 thin films.Keywords: complex oxides; doping; interstitials; SrTiO3; STEM/EELS
Copper zinc oxide
protium
Barium stannate