April 22 - 26, 2024
Seattle, Washington
May 7 - 9, 2024 (Virtual)
Symposium Supporters
2024 MRS Spring Meeting
EL07.02.02

Dynamic Mechanical Writing of Ferroelectric Bubbles

When and Where

Apr 23, 2024
2:00pm - 2:30pm
Room 342, Level 3, Summit

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

Chan-Ho Yang1

KAIST1

Abstract

Chan-Ho Yang1

KAIST1
Topological ferroelectric structures offering novel functionalities due to peculiar distributions of polarization and charge with long retention have been increasingly explored in a variety of dielectric systems, such as superlattices, strained films, and nanoscale islands. The polar structures, protected by topological constraints such as boundary conditions, appear as metastable states due to the interplay between strain, depolarization and gradient energies, but their precise control is still challenging. In this study, we demonstrate the observation of skyrmion-like centre-type polar bubble domains in supertetragonal BiFeO<sub>3</sub> thin films. These polar textures are mechanically generated by dynamic elastic force of vibrational tapping using scanning probe microscope tips. The formation of bubble domains is accompanied by emergence of strain-driven morphotropic phase boundaries wherein two competing structural phases coexist. The bubble domains can be accurately written, mechanically or electrically erased, and remain stable for longer than ~500 days. Vibrational tapping can bidirectionally switch out-of-plane polarization by exerting strong tapping force onto the elastically soft surface driven by the morphotropic phase transition, which may be attributed to non-linear flexoelectric effects in the large strain-gradient regime beyond the conventional flexoelectrical concept. Our study presents insights into dynamic mechanical switching of polarization and provides a unique pathway into topological polar structures for next-generation energy-efficient electronic applications.

Keywords

piezoresponse

Symposium Organizers

John Heron, University of Michigan
Morgan Trassin, ETH Zurich
Ruijuan Xu, North Carolina State University
Di Yi, Tsinghua University

Symposium Support

Gold
ADNANOTEK CORP.

Bronze
Arrayed Materials (China) Co., Ltd.
NBM Design, Inc.

Session Chairs

Yen-Lin Huang
Ruijuan Xu

In this Session