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Dive into the research topics where Yeong Jae Shin is active.

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Featured researches published by Yeong Jae Shin.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Flexoelectric Control of Defect Formation in Ferroelectric Epitaxial Thin Films

Daesu Lee; Byung Chul Jeon; Aram Yoon; Yeong Jae Shin; M. H. Lee; Tae Kwon Song; Sang Don Bu; Miyoung Kim; Jin-Seok Chung; Jong-Gul Yoon; Tae Won Noh

Flexoelectric control of defect formation and associated electronic function is demonstrated in ferroelectric BiFeO3 thin films. An intriguing, so far never demonstrated, effect of internal electric field (Eint ) on defect formation is explored by a means of flexoelectricity. Our study provides novel insight into defect engineering, as well as allows a pathway to design defect configuration and associated electronic function.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Active control of ferroelectric switching using defect-dipole engineering.

Daesu Lee; Byung Chul Jeon; Seung Hyub Baek; Sang Mo Yang; Yeong Jae Shin; Tae Heon Kim; Yong Su Kim; Jong-Gul Yoon; Chang-Beom Eom; Tae Won Noh

Active control of defect structures and associated polarization switching in a ferroelectric material is achieved without compromising its ferroelectric properties. Based on dipolar interaction between defect dipole and polarization, the unique functionality of the defect dipole to control ferroelectric switching is visualized. This approach can provide a foundation for novel ferroelectric applications, such as high-density multilevel data storage.


Nano Letters | 2016

Overcoming the Fundamental Barrier Thickness Limits of Ferroelectric Tunnel Junctions through BaTiO3/SrTiO3 Composite Barriers

Lingfei Wang; Myung Rae Cho; Yeong Jae Shin; Jeong Rae Kim; Saikat Das; Jong-Gul Yoon; Jin-Seok Chung; Tae Won Noh

Ferroelectric tunnel junctions (FTJs) have attracted increasing research interest as a promising candidate for nonvolatile memories. Recently, significant enhancements of tunneling electroresistance (TER) have been realized through modifications of electrode materials. However, direct control of the FTJ performance through modifying the tunneling barrier has not been adequately explored. Here, adding a new direction to FTJ research, we fabricated FTJs with BaTiO3 single barriers (SB-FTJs) and BaTiO3/SrTiO3 composite barriers (CB-FTJs) and reported a systematic study of FTJ performances by varying the barrier thicknesses and compositions. For the SB-FTJs, the TER is limited by pronounced leakage current for ultrathin barriers and extremely small tunneling current for thick barriers. For the CB-FTJs, the extra SrTiO3 barrier provides an additional degree of freedom to modulate the barrier potential and tunneling behavior. The resultant high tunability can be utilized to overcome the barrier thickness limits and enhance the overall CB-FTJ performances beyond those of SB-FTJ. Our results reveal a new paradigm to manipulate the FTJs through designing multilayer tunneling barriers with hybrid functionalities.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Interface Control of Ferroelectricity in an SrRuO3/BaTiO3/SrRuO3 Capacitor and its Critical Thickness

Yeong Jae Shin; Yoonkoo Kim; Sung Jin Kang; Ho Hyun Nahm; P. Murugavel; Jeong Rae Kim; Myung Rae Cho; Lingfei Wang; Sang Mo Yang; Jong Gul Yoon; Jin Seok Chung; Miyoung Kim; Hua Zhou; Seo Hyoung Chang; Tae Won Noh

The atomic-scale synthesis of artificial oxide heterostructures offers new opportunities to create novel states that do not occur in nature. The main challenge related to synthesizing these structures is obtaining atomically sharp interfaces with designed termination sequences. In this study, it is demonstrated that the oxygen pressure (PO2) during growth plays an important role in controlling the interfacial terminations of SrRuO3 /BaTiO3 /SrRuO3 (SRO/BTO/SRO) ferroelectric (FE) capacitors. The SRO/BTO/SRO heterostructures are grown by a pulsed laser deposition method. The top SRO/BTO interface, grown at high PO2 (around 150 mTorr), usually exhibits a mixture of RuO2 -BaO and SrO-TiO2 terminations. By reducing PO2, the authors obtain atomically sharp SRO/BTO top interfaces with uniform SrO-TiO2 termination. Using capacitor devices with symmetric and uniform interfacial termination, it is demonstrated for the first time that the FE critical thickness can reach the theoretical limit of 3.5 unit cells.


Nature Communications | 2017

Controlled manipulation of oxygen vacancies using nanoscale flexoelectricity

Saikat Das; Bo Wang; Ye Cao; Myung Rae Cho; Yeong Jae Shin; Sang Mo Yang; Lingfei Wang; Minu Kim; Sergei V. Kalinin; Long-Qing Chen; Tae Won Noh

Oxygen vacancies, especially their distribution, are directly coupled to the electromagnetic properties of oxides and related emergent functionalities that have implications for device applications. Here using a homoepitaxial strontium titanate thin film, we demonstrate a controlled manipulation of the oxygen vacancy distribution using the mechanical force from a scanning probe microscope tip. By combining Kelvin probe force microscopy imaging and phase-field simulations, we show that oxygen vacancies can move under a stress-gradient-induced depolarisation field. When tailored, this nanoscale flexoelectric effect enables a controlled spatial modulation. In motion, the scanning probe tip thereby deterministically reconfigures the spatial distribution of vacancies. The ability to locally manipulate oxygen vacancies on-demand provides a tool for the exploration of mesoscale quantum phenomena and engineering multifunctional oxide devices.The properties of complex oxides such as strontium titanate are strongly affected by the presence and distribution of oxygen vacancies. Here, the authors demonstrate that a scanning probe microscope tip can be used to manipulate vacancies by the flexoelectric effect.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Oxygen Partial Pressure during Pulsed Laser Deposition: Deterministic Role on Thermodynamic Stability of Atomic Termination Sequence at SrRuO3/BaTiO3 Interface

Yeong Jae Shin; Lingfei Wang; Yoonkoo Kim; Ho-Hyun Nahm; Daesu Lee; Jeong Rae Kim; Sang Mo Yang; Jong-Gul Yoon; Jin-Seok Chung; Miyoung Kim; Seo Hyoung Chang; Tae Won Noh

With recent trends on miniaturizing oxide-based devices, the need for atomic-scale control of surface/interface structures by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) has increased. In particular, realizing uniform atomic termination at the surface/interface is highly desirable. However, a lack of understanding on the surface formation mechanism in PLD has limited a deliberate control of surface/interface atomic stacking sequences. Here, taking the prototypical SrRuO3/BaTiO3/SrRuO3 (SRO/BTO/SRO) heterostructure as a model system, we investigated the formation of different interfacial termination sequences (BaO-RuO2 or TiO2-SrO) with oxygen partial pressure (PO2) during PLD. We found that a uniform SrO-TiO2 termination sequence at the SRO/BTO interface can be achieved by lowering the PO2 to 5 mTorr, regardless of the total background gas pressure (Ptotal), growth mode, or growth rate. Our results indicate that the thermodynamic stability of the BTO surface at the low-energy kinetics stage of PLD can play an important role in surface/interface termination formation. This work paves the way for realizing termination engineering in functional oxide heterostructures.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Electronic-Reconstruction-Enhanced Tunneling Conductance at Terrace Edges of Ultrathin Oxide Films

Lingfei Wang; Rokyeon Kim; Yoonkoo Kim; Choong H. Kim; Sangwoon Hwang; Myung Rae Cho; Yeong Jae Shin; Saikat Das; Jeong Rae Kim; Sergei V. Kalinin; Miyoung Kim; Sang Mo Yang; Tae Won Noh

Quantum mechanical tunneling of electrons across ultrathin insulating oxide barriers has been studied extensively for decades due to its great potential in electronic-device applications. In the few-nanometers-thick epitaxial oxide films, atomic-scale structural imperfections, such as the ubiquitously existed one-unit-cell-high terrace edges, can dramatically affect the tunneling probability and device performance. However, the underlying physics has not been investigated adequately. Here, taking ultrathin BaTiO3 films as a model system, an intrinsic tunneling-conductance enhancement is reported near the terrace edges. Scanning-probe-microscopy results demonstrate the existence of highly conductive regions (tens of nanometers wide) near the terrace edges. First-principles calculations suggest that the terrace-edge geometry can trigger an electronic reconstruction, which reduces the effective tunneling barrier width locally. Furthermore, such tunneling-conductance enhancement can be discovered in other transition metal oxides and controlled by surface-termination engineering. The controllable electronic reconstruction can facilitate the implementation of oxide electronic devices and discovery of exotic low-dimensional quantum phases.


Applied Physics Express | 2015

Publisher’s Note: “Ferromagnetic SrRuO3 thin-film deposition on a spin-triplet superconductor Sr2RuO4 with a highly conducting interface”

M. S. Anwar; Yeong Jae Shin; Seung Ran Lee; Sung Jin Kang; Yusuke Sugimoto; Shingo Yonezawa; Tae Won Noh; Yoshiteru Maeno


Archive | 2017

Electronic characteristics of ultrathin SrRuO

Subeen Pang; Yoonkoo Kim; Yeong Jae Shin; Byungmin Sohn; Seung-Yong Lee; Tae Won Noh; Miyoung Kim


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

_3

Yeong Jae Shin; Lingfei Wang; Yoonkoo Kim; Miyoung Kim; Seo Hyoung Chang; Tae Won Noh

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Tae Won Noh

Seoul National University

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Lingfei Wang

Seoul National University

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Miyoung Kim

Seoul National University

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Yoonkoo Kim

Seoul National University

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Sang Mo Yang

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Jeong Rae Kim

Seoul National University

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Myung Rae Cho

Seoul National University

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Daesu Lee

Seoul National University

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