- Main
Liberating a hidden antiferroelectric phase with interfacial electrostatic engineering.
- Mundy, Julia;
- Grosso, Bastien;
- Heikes, Colin;
- Ferenc Segedin, Dan;
- Wang, Zhe;
- Shao, Yu-Tsun;
- Dai, Cheng;
- Goodge, Berit;
- Meier, Quintin;
- Nelson, Christopher;
- Prasad, Bhagwati;
- Xue, Fei;
- Ganschow, Steffen;
- Muller, David;
- Kourkoutis, Lena;
- Chen, Long-Qing;
- Ratcliff, William;
- Spaldin, Nicola;
- Ramesh, Ramamoorthy;
- Schlom, Darrell
- et al.
Abstract
Antiferroelectric materials have seen a resurgence of interest because of proposed applications in a number of energy-efficient technologies. Unfortunately, relatively few families of antiferroelectric materials have been identified, precluding many proposed applications. Here, we propose a design strategy for the construction of antiferroelectric materials using interfacial electrostatic engineering. We begin with a ferroelectric material with one of the highest known bulk polarizations, BiFeO3. By confining thin layers of BiFeO3 in a dielectric matrix, we show that a metastable antiferroelectric structure can be induced. Application of an electric field reversibly switches between this new phase and a ferroelectric state. The use of electrostatic confinement provides an untapped pathway for the design of engineered antiferroelectric materials with large and potentially coupled responses.
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