Defeating depolarizing fields with artificial flux closure in ultrathin ferroelectrics.
Elzbieta GradauskaiteQuintin N MeierNatascha GrayMartin F SarottTizian ScharsachMarco CampaniniThomas MoranAlexander VogelKarla Del Cid-LedezmaBryan D HueyMarta D RossellManfred FiebigMorgan TrassinPublished in: Nature materials (2023)
Material surfaces encompass structural and chemical discontinuities that often lead to the loss of the property of interest in so-called dead layers. It is particularly problematic in nanoscale oxide electronics, where the integration of strongly correlated materials into devices is obstructed by the thickness threshold required for the emergence of their functionality. Here we report the stabilization of ultrathin out-of-plane ferroelectricity in oxide heterostructures through the design of an artificial flux-closure architecture. Inserting an in-plane-polarized ferroelectric epitaxial buffer provides the continuity of polarization at the interface; despite its insulating nature, we observe the emergence of polarization in our out-of-plane-polarized model of ferroelectric BaTiO 3 from the very first unit cell. In BiFeO 3 , the flux-closure approach stabilizes a 251° domain wall. Its unusual chirality is probably associated with the ferroelectric analogue to the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. We, thus, see that in an adaptively engineered geometry, the depolarizing-field-screening properties of an insulator can even surpass those of a metal and be a source of functionality. This could be a useful insight on the road towards the next generation of oxide electronics.