4.8 Article

Charged Ferroelectric Domain Walls for Deterministic ac Signal Control at the Nanoscale

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 21, Issue 22, Pages 9560-9566

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c03182

Keywords

Ferroelectric; domain walls; nanoelectronics; improper ferroelectricity; alternating current

Funding

  1. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation through a Feodor-Lynen research fellowship
  2. Onsager Fellowship Program
  3. Outstanding Academic Fellow Program
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program [86691]
  5. German Science foundation via the Collaborative Research Center [TRR80]
  6. US Department of Energy/Basic Energy Sciences/Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering within the Quantum Materials Program [DE-AC02-05-CH11231, KC2202]

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The charge state of domain walls affects their behavior in both direct and alternating electrical fields. While charged walls show unique responses to alternating currents compared to the surrounding domains, voltage-dependent spectroscopic measurements reveal pronounced nonlinear responses at the electrode-wall junction, enabling reversible switching between unipolar and bipolar output signals.
The direct current (dc) conductivity and emergent functionalities at ferroelectric domain walls are closely linked to the local polarization charges. Depending on the charge state, the walls can exhibit unusual dc conduction ranging from insulating to metallic-like, which is leveraged in domain-wall-based memory, multilevel data storage, and synaptic devices. In contrast to the functional dc behaviors at charged walls, their response to alternating currents (ac) remains to be resolved. Here, we reveal ac characteristics at positively and negatively charged walls in ErMnO3, distinctly different from the response of the surrounding domains. By combining voltage-dependent spectroscopic measurements on macroscopic and local scales, we demonstrate a pronounced nonlinear response at the electrode-wall junction, which correlates with the domain-wall charge state. The dependence on the ac drive voltage enables reversible switching between uni- and bipolar output signals, providing conceptually new opportunities for the application of charged walls as functional nanoelements in ac circuitry.

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