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Non-volatile electric-field control of inversion symmetry.

Lucas CarettaYu-Tsun ShaoJia YuAntonio B MeiBastien F GrossoCheng DaiPiush BeheraDaehun LeeMargaret McCarterEric ParsonnetHarikrishnan K PFei XueXiangwei GuoEdward S BarnardSteffen GanschowZijian HongArchana RajaLane W MartinLong-Qing ChenManfred FiebigKeji LaiNicola A SpaldinDavid A MullerDarrell G SchlomRamamoorthy Ramesh
Published in: Nature materials (2022)
Competition between ground states at phase boundaries can lead to significant changes in properties under stimuli, particularly when these ground states have different crystal symmetries. A key challenge is to stabilize and control the coexistence of symmetry-distinct phases. Using BiFeO 3 layers confined between layers of dielectric TbScO 3 as a model system, we stabilize the mixed-phase coexistence of centrosymmetric and non-centrosymmetric BiFeO 3 phases at room temperature with antipolar, insulating and polar semiconducting behaviour, respectively. Application of orthogonal in-plane electric (polar) fields results in reversible non-volatile interconversion between the two phases, hence removing and introducing centrosymmetry. Counterintuitively, we find that an electric field 'erases' polarization, resulting from the anisotropy in octahedral tilts introduced by the interweaving TbScO 3 layers. Consequently, this interconversion between centrosymmetric and non-centrosymmetric phases generates changes in the non-linear optical response of over three orders of magnitude, resistivity of over five orders of magnitude and control of microscopic polar order. Our work establishes a platform for cross-functional devices that take advantage of changes in optical, electrical and ferroic responses, and demonstrates octahedral tilts as an important order parameter in materials interface design.
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