Publication | Open Access
Electrostatic tuning of Kondo effect in a rare-earth-doped wide-band-gap oxide
56
Citations
41
References
2013
Year
Wide-bandgap SemiconductorEngineeringLocalized SpinsElectrostatic TuningElectronic StructureMagnetismNanoelectronicsQuantum MaterialsMaterials ScienceSolid-state IonicPhysicsOxide ElectronicsSemiconductor MaterialSolid-state PhysicSpintronicsIonic ConductorApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsNegative MagnetoresistanceKondo Effect
As a long-lived theme in solid-state physics, the Kondo effect reflects the many-body physics involving the short-range Coulomb interactions between itinerant electrons and localized spins in metallic materials. Here we show that the Kondo effect is present in ZnO, a prototypical wide-band-gap oxide, doped with a rare-earth element (Gd). The localized 4$f$ electrons of Gd ions do not produce remanent magnetism, but interact strongly with the host electrons, giving rise to a saturating resistance upturn and negative magnetoresistance at low temperatures. Furthermore, the Kondo temperature and resistance can be electrostatically modulated using electric-double-layer gating with liquid ionic electrolyte. Our experiments provide the experimental evidence of tunable Kondo effect in ZnO, underscoring the magnetic interactions between localized and itinerant electrons and the emergent transport behaviors in such doped wide-band-gap oxides.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1