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Creators/Authors contains: "Choi, Woo_Seok"

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  1. Abstract Artificial superlattices composed of perovskite oxides serves as an essential platform for engineering coherent phonon transport by redefining the lattice periodicity, which strongly influences the lattice‐coupled phase transitions in charge and spin degrees of freedom. However, previous methods of manipulating phonons have been limited to controlling the periodicity of superlattice, rather than utilizing complex mutual interactions that are prominent in transition metal oxides. In this study on oxide superlattices composed of ferromagnetic metallic SrRuO3and quantum paraelectric SrTiO3, phonon modulation by controlling the geometry of superlattice in atomic‐scale precision is realized, demonstrating the coherent phonon engineering using structural and magnetic phase transitions. By modulating the interface density, coherent‐incoherent crossover of the phonon transport at room temperature is observed, which is coupled with a change in interfacial structural continuity. Upon cooling, the close relation between phonon transport and multiple phase transitions is identified. In particular, the enhancement of the polar state in SrTiO3layer at ≈200 K leads to the weakening of phonon coherence and a further reduction of thermal conductivity in superlattices compared to the bulk limit. These findings provide a guide to developing future thermoelectric nanodevices by engineering the coherence of phonons via the design of complex oxide heterostructures. 
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  2. Abstract Engineering of phonons, that is, collective lattice vibrations in crystals, is essential for manipulating physical properties of materials such as thermal transport, electron‐phonon interaction, confinement of lattice vibration, and optical polarization. Most approaches to phonon‐engineering have been largely limited to the high‐quality heterostructures of III–V compound semiconductors. Yet, artificial engineering of phonons in a variety of materials with functional properties, such as complex oxides, will yield unprecedented applications of coherent tunable phonons in future quantum acoustic devices. In this study, artificial engineering of phonons in the atomic‐scale SrRuO3/SrTiO3superlattices is demonstrated, wherein tunable phonon modes are observed via confocal Raman spectroscopy. In particular, the coherent superlattices led to the backfolding of acoustic phonon dispersion, resulting in zone‐folded acoustic phonons in the THz frequency domain. The frequencies can be largely tuned from 1 to 2 THz via atomic‐scale precision thickness control. In addition, a polar optical phonon originating from the local inversion symmetry breaking in the artificial oxide superlattices is observed, exhibiting emergent functionality. The approach of atomic‐scale heterostructuring of complex oxides will vastly expand material systems for quantum acoustic devices, especially with the viability of functionality integration. 
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