Abstract

The heterostructure of bismuth (Bi) and Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ (Bi2212) is considered as a potential type of quantum material. The strain-engineering controls the band structure in the composite films, which is applied in the high-temperature quantum spin Hall materials. In this work, Bi/Bi2212 composite film is synthesized using a two-step method to reduce the fabrication cost. The microstructure and transport properties of the composite films are characterized and analyzed. Experimental results demonstrate that the Bi/Bi2212 composite film obtains the high-quality crystallinity and excellent connectivity. The transport property measurement results show that the band structure changes due to the coupled effects of the strain and electric field. The origin is the compensation between the electron and hole charge carriers. The above band gap change leads to a shift in the metal-semiconductor transition temperature. Functionally coupled composite films exhibit new properties in magnetoresistance devices.

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