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Purely in-plane ferroelectricity in monolayer SnS at room temperature.

Naoki HigashitarumizuHayami KawamotoChien-Ju LeeBo-Han LinFu-Hsien ChuItsuki YonemoriTomonori NishimuraKatsunori WakabayashiWen-Hao ChangKosuke Nagashio
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
2D van der Waals ferroelectrics have emerged as an attractive building block with immense potential to provide multifunctionality in nanoelectronics. Although several accomplishments have been reported in ferroelectric switching for out-of-plane ferroelectrics down to the monolayer, a purely in-plane ferroelectric has not been experimentally validated at the monolayer thickness. Herein, an in-plane ferroelectricity is demonstrated for micrometer-size monolayer SnS at room temperature. SnS has been commonly regarded to exhibit the odd-even effect, where the centrosymmetry breaks only in the odd-number layers to exhibit ferroelectricity. Remarkably, however, a robust room temperature ferroelectricity exists in SnS below a critical thickness of 15 layers with both an odd and even number of layers, suggesting the possibility of controlling the stacking sequence of multilayer SnS beyond the limit of ferroelectricity in the monolayer. This work will pave the way for nanoscale ferroelectric applications based on SnS as a platform for in-plane ferroelectrics.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • solar cells
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule