The Materials Physics Laboratory at the University of Texas in Austin is a cross-college collaborative laboratory aiming to advance the fundamental understanding of new materials, particularly complex oxides. Oxides are moving to the forefront of materials research, with potential applications in electronics, spintronics, optics, sensors, and energy.
Our team is an interdisciplinary group of Texas Materials Institute (TMI) members on Main Campus: Professor Alex Demkov in the Department of Physics and Professor John Ekerdt in the Department of Chemical Engineering. We focus on the growth and characterization of epitaxial oxide heterostructures and their integration with semiconductors.
The core of the lab is the DCA M600 Oxide Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE) deposition system, which has been operational since December 2009. The growth chamber is attached to a 12-foot transfer system allowing for the in situ transfer of samples between the growth chamber and other attached analysis and deposition systems. This includes a commercial angle-resolved ultraviolet and x-ray photoemission spectroscopy system from VG Scienta. The MBE has been operational since 2009 and all major facilities have been operational since late Fall 2011.
An additional system was recently installed capable of RF Magnetron Sputtering. This growth chamber is capable of in situ reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED) , although unlike the RHEED system in the MBE system, it can’t be operated during film deposition.