Abstract

Two-dimensional electron gas due to semiconductor interfaces can have high mobility and exhibits superconductivity, magnetism, and other exotic properties that are unexpected in constituent bulk materials. We study crystal structures, electronic states, and magnetism of short-period (BTO)m/(GTO)2 (m=2 and 4) superlattices consisting of insulating BaTiO3 (BTO) and GdTiO3 (GTO) by first principles calculations. Our investigation shows that the middle Ti-O monolayer in the GTO layer becomes metallic. Although both GTO and BTO share a common constituent, the Ti-O atomic layer, the M-O (M=Ba, Ti, and Gd) displacements along the c axis in each monolayer reflect the asymmetry of two interfacial Ti-O monolayers and the large distortion of the TiO6 octahedra in such superlattices, against electronic reconstruction at the interfaces and thus differentially changing the d energy levels of the three Ti-O monolayers related with the GTO layer. Such superlattices are interesting for potential spintronics applications because of their unique asymmetrical two-dimensional electron-gas properties and possible useful spin-orbit effects.

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