Author
Listed:
- Chloe H. Skidmore
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- R. Jackson Spurling
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- John Hayden
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Steven M. Baksa
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Drew Behrendt
(The University of Pennsylvania)
- Devin Goodling
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Joshua L. Nordlander
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Albert Suceava
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Joseph Casamento
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Betul Akkopru-Akgun
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Sebastian Calderon
(Carnegie Mellon University)
- Ismaila Dabo
(Carnegie Mellon University)
- Venkatraman Gopalan
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Kyle P. Kelley
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
- Andrew M. Rappe
(The University of Pennsylvania)
- Susan Trolier-McKinstry
(The Pennsylvania State University)
- Elizabeth C. Dickey
(Carnegie Mellon University)
- Jon-Paul Maria
(The Pennsylvania State University)
Abstract
Proximity ferroelectricity is an interface-associated phenomenon in electric-field-driven polarization reversal in a non-ferroelectric polar material induced by one or more adjacent ferroelectric materials. Here we report proximity ferroelectricity in wurtzite ferroelectric heterostructures. In the present case, the non-ferroelectric layers are AlN and ZnO, whereas the ferroelectric layers are Al1−xBxN, Al1−xScxN and Zn1−xMgxO. The layered structures include nitride–nitride, oxide–oxide and nitride–oxide stacks that feature two-layer (asymmetric) and three-layer (symmetric) configurations1–3. Ferroelectric switching in both layers is validated by multimodal characterization methods, including polarization hysteresis, anisotropic chemical etching, second harmonic generation, piezo response force microscopy, electromechanical testing and atomic resolution polarization orientation imaging in real space by scanning transmission electron microscopy. We present a physical switching model in which antipolar nuclei originate in the ferroelectric layer and propagate towards the internal non-ferroelectric interface. The domain wall leading edge produces elastic and electric fields that extend beyond the interface at close proximity, reducing the switching barrier in the non-ferroelectric layer, and allowing complete domain propagation without breakdown. Density functional theory calculations of polymorph energies, reversal barriers and domain wall energies support this model. Proximity ferroelectricity enables polarization reversal in wurtzites without the chemical or structural disorder that accompanies elemental substitution, opening new questions and opportunities regarding interface-based ferroelectricity.
Suggested Citation
Chloe H. Skidmore & R. Jackson Spurling & John Hayden & Steven M. Baksa & Drew Behrendt & Devin Goodling & Joshua L. Nordlander & Albert Suceava & Joseph Casamento & Betul Akkopru-Akgun & Sebastian Ca, 2025.
"Proximity ferroelectricity in wurtzite heterostructures,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 637(8046), pages 574-579, January.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:637:y:2025:i:8046:d:10.1038_s41586-024-08295-y
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08295-y
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