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Dive into the research topics where C. Carrétéro is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Carrétéro.


Nature Materials | 2008

Mapping the spatial distribution of charge carriers in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 heterostructures

Mario Basletić; Jean-Luc Maurice; C. Carrétéro; Gervasi Herranz; Olivier Copie; M. Bibes; E. Jacquet; K. Bouzehouane; S. Fusil; A. Barthélémy

At the interface between complex insulating oxides, novel phases with interesting properties may occur, such as the metallic state reported in the LaAlO(3)/SrTiO(3) system . Although this state has been predicted and reported to be confined at the interface, some studies indicate a much broader spatial extension, thereby questioning its origin. Here, we provide for the first time a direct determination of the carrier density profile of this system through resistance profile mappings collected in cross-section LaAlO(3)/SrTiO(3) samples with a conducting-tip atomic force microscope (CT-AFM). We find that, depending on specific growth protocols, the spatial extension of the high-mobility electron gas can be varied from hundreds of micrometres into SrTiO(3) to a few nanometres next to the LaAlO(3)/SrTiO(3) interface. Our results emphasize the potential of CT-AFM as a novel tool to characterize complex oxide interfaces and provide us with a definitive and conclusive way to reconcile the body of experimental data in this system.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Inverse spin Hall effect in nanometer-thick yttrium iron garnet/Pt system

O. d'Allivy Kelly; A. Anane; R. Bernard; J. Ben Youssef; C. Hahn; A. Molpeceres; C. Carrétéro; E. Jacquet; C. Deranlot; P. Bortolotti; Richard Lebourgeois; J.-C. Mage; G. de Loubens; O. Klein; V. Cros; A. Fert

High quality nanometer-thick (20 nm, 7 nm, and 4 nm) epitaxial Yttrium Iron Garnet (YIG) films have been grown on gadolinium gallium garnet substrates using pulsed laser deposition. The Gilbert damping coefficient for the 20 nm thick films is 2.3 × 10−4 which is the lowest value reported for sub-micrometric thick films. We demonstrate Inverse spin Hall effect (ISHE) detection of propagating spin waves using Pt. The amplitude and the lineshape of the ISHE voltage correlate well to the increase of the Gilbert damping when decreasing thickness of YIG. Spin Hall effect based loss-compensation experiments have been conducted but no change in the magnetization dynamics could be detected.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Towards Two-Dimensional Metallic Behavior at LaAlO3/SrTiO3 Interfaces

O. Copie; V. Garcia; C. Bodefeld; C. Carrétéro; M. Bibes; G. Herranz; Eric Jacquet; Jean-Luc Maurice; B. Vinter; S. Fusil; K. Bouzehouane; Henri Jaffrès; A. Barthelemy

Using a low-temperature conductive-tip atomic force microscope in cross-section geometry we have characterized the local transport properties of the metallic electron gas that forms at the interface between LaAlO3 and SrTiO3. At low temperature, we find that the carriers do not spread away from the interface but are confined within approximately 10 nm, just like at room temperature. Simulations taking into account both the large temperature and electric-field dependence of the permittivity of SrTiO3 predict a confinement over a few nm for sheet carrier densities larger than approximately 6x10(13) cm(-2). We discuss the experimental and simulations results in terms of a multiband carrier system. Remarkably, the Fermi wavelength estimated from Hall measurements is approximately 16 nm, indicating that the electron gas in on the verge of two dimensionality.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

High-performance ferroelectric memory based on fully patterned tunnel junctions

Sören Boyn; Stéphanie Girod; Vincent Garcia; S. Fusil; Stéphane Xavier; C. Deranlot; Hiroyuki Yamada; C. Carrétéro; Eric Jacquet; M. Bibes; A. Barthélémy; Julie Grollier

In tunnel junctions with ferroelectric barriers, switching the polarization direction modifies the electrostatic potential profile and the associated average tunnel barrier height. This results in strong changes of the tunnel transmission and associated resistance. The information readout in ferroelectric tunnel junctions (FTJs) is thus resistive and non-destructive, which is an advantage compared to the case of conventional ferroelectric memories (FeRAMs). Initially, endurance limitation (i.e., fatigue) was the main factor hampering the industrialization of FeRAMs. Systematic investigations of switching dynamics for various ferroelectric and electrode materials have resolved this issue, with endurance now reaching 1014 cycles. Here we investigate data retention and endurance in fully patterned submicron Co/BiFeO3/Ca0.96Ce0.04MnO3 FTJs. We report good reproducibility with high resistance contrasts and extend the maximum reported endurance of FTJs by three orders of magnitude (4 × 106 cycles). Our results ...


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Optical properties of integrated multiferroic BiFeO3 thin films for microwave applications

J. Allibe; K. Bougot-Robin; E. Jacquet; I. C. Infante; S. Fusil; C. Carrétéro; J.-L. Reverchon; B. Marcilhac; D. Creté; J.-C. Mage; A. Barthélémy; M. Bibes

BiFeO3 is the prototypical multiferroic and one of the few with both (anti)ferroic ordering temperatures above 300 K. While its magnetic and ferroelectric properties and their coupling have been investigated intensely, offering opportunities in spintronics, little is known concerning its optical properties and their coupling to the ferroic orders. For applications in the microwave range, we report on the integration of BiFeO3 onto low permittivity substrates. Such integrated films show good ferroelectric and optical properties consistent with those of films grown on SrTiO3 substrates. Prospects for the use of BiFeO3 in optical applications are discussed.


Nature Communications | 2017

Learning through ferroelectric domain dynamics in solid-state synapses

Sören Boyn; Julie Grollier; Gwendal Lecerf; Bin Xu; Nicolas Locatelli; S. Fusil; Stéphanie Girod; C. Carrétéro; Karin Garcia; Stéphane Xavier; Jean Tomas; L. Bellaiche; M. Bibes; A. Barthélémy; Sylvain Saïghi; Vincent Garcia

In the brain, learning is achieved through the ability of synapses to reconfigure the strength by which they connect neurons (synaptic plasticity). In promising solid-state synapses called memristors, conductance can be finely tuned by voltage pulses and set to evolve according to a biological learning rule called spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP). Future neuromorphic architectures will comprise billions of such nanosynapses, which require a clear understanding of the physical mechanisms responsible for plasticity. Here we report on synapses based on ferroelectric tunnel junctions and show that STDP can be harnessed from inhomogeneous polarization switching. Through combined scanning probe imaging, electrical transport and atomic-scale molecular dynamics, we demonstrate that conductance variations can be modelled by the nucleation-dominated reversal of domains. Based on this physical model, our simulations show that arrays of ferroelectric nanosynapses can autonomously learn to recognize patterns in a predictable way, opening the path towards unsupervised learning in spiking neural networks.


Nature Communications | 2016

Large elasto-optic effect and reversible electrochromism in multiferroic BiFeO3

Daniel Sando; Yurong Yang; Eric Bousquet; C. Carrétéro; Vincent Garcia; S. Fusil; Daniel Dolfi; A. Barthélémy; Philippe Ghosez; L. Bellaiche; M. Bibes

The control of optical fields is usually achieved through the electro-optic or acousto-optic effect in single-crystal ferroelectric or polar compounds such as LiNbO3 or quartz. In recent years, tremendous progress has been made in ferroelectric oxide thin film technology—a field which is now a strong driving force in areas such as electronics, spintronics and photovoltaics. Here, we apply epitaxial strain engineering to tune the optical response of BiFeO3 thin films, and find a very large variation of the optical index with strain, corresponding to an effective elasto-optic coefficient larger than that of quartz. We observe a concomitant strain-driven variation in light absorption—reminiscent of piezochromism—which we show can be manipulated by an electric field. This constitutes an electrochromic effect that is reversible, remanent and not driven by defects. These findings broaden the potential of multiferroics towards photonics and thin film acousto-optic devices, and suggest exciting device opportunities arising from the coupling of ferroic, piezoelectric and optical responses.


EPL | 2008

Electron energy loss spectroscopy determination of Ti oxidation state at the (001) LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface as a function of LaAIO3 growth conditions

Jean-Luc Maurice; Gervasi Herranz; C. Colliex; Isabelle Devos; C. Carrétéro; A. Barthélémy; K. Bouzehouane; S. Fusil; D. Imhoff; E. Jacquet; François Jomard; D. Ballutaud; Mario Basletić

After the epitaxy of LaAlO3 on a TiO2-terminated {100} surface of SrTiO3, a high-mobility electron gas may appear, which has been the object of numerous works over the last four years. Its origin is a subject of debate between the interface polarity and unintended doping. Here we use electron energy loss spectrum images, recorded in cross-section in a scanning transmission electron microscope, to analyse the Ti3+ ratio, characteristic of extra electrons. We find an interface concentration of Ti3+ that depends on growth conditions.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Controlling high-mobility conduction in SrTiO3 by oxide thin film deposition

Gervasi Herranz; Mario Basletić; Olivier Copie; M. Bibes; A. N. Khodan; C. Carrétéro; Emil Tafra; E. Jacquet; K. Bouzehouane; A. Hamzić; A. Barthélémy

SrTiO3 becomes a high-mobility metallic conductor when doped with oxygen vacancies at low concentrations (≥1016 cm−3). We show that the vacancy concentration in the SrTiO3 single crystal substrates could be controllably tuned by changing the thickness of oxide films (deposited by pulsed laser deposition at high temperature and low oxygen pressure). The obtained variation in the carrier density strongly influences the transport properties. The quantitative analysis of the experimental results leads toward new and accurate strategies for the design of multifunctional oxide heterostructures for electronics and spintronics.


Nano Letters | 2015

Depth profiling charge accumulation from a ferroelectric into a doped Mott insulator.

Maya Marinova; Julien E. Rault; Alexandre Gloter; Slavomír Nemšák; Gunnar K. Palsson; Jean-Pascal Rueff; C. S. Fadley; C. Carrétéro; Hiroyuki Yamada; Katia March; Vincent Garcia; S. Fusil; A. Barthélémy; Odile Stéphan; C. Colliex; M. Bibes

The electric field control of functional properties is a crucial goal in oxide-based electronics. Nonvolatile switching between different resistivity or magnetic states in an oxide channel can be achieved through charge accumulation or depletion from an adjacent ferroelectric. However, the way in which charge distributes near the interface between the ferroelectric and the oxide remains poorly known, which limits our understanding of such switching effects. Here, we use a first-of-a-kind combination of scanning transmission electron microscopy with electron energy loss spectroscopy, near-total-reflection hard X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, and ab initio theory to address this issue. We achieve a direct, quantitative, atomic-scale characterization of the polarization-induced charge density changes at the interface between the ferroelectric BiFeO3 and the doped Mott insulator Ca(1-x)Ce(x)MnO3, thus providing insight on how interface-engineering can enhance these switching effects.

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Dive into the C. Carrétéro's collaboration.

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A. Barthélémy

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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S. Fusil

École Polytechnique

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M. Bibes

Université Paris-Saclay

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E. Jacquet

University of Paris-Sud

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K. Bouzehouane

Université Paris-Saclay

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M. Bibes

Université Paris-Saclay

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C. Deranlot

Université Paris-Saclay

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Eric Jacquet

Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles

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