4.8 Article

Ferroelectric incommensurate spin crystals

Journal

NATURE
Volume 602, Issue 7896, Pages 240-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04260-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPSRC (UK) [EP/P031544/1, EP/P025803/1]
  2. Royal Society
  3. DOE Office of Science [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

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This study reveals the existence of periodic vortices in a PbTiO3 epitaxial layer, blurring the boundary between ferromagnetic and ferroelectric topologies.
Ferroics, especially ferromagnets, can form complextopological spin structures such as vortices(1) and skyrmions(2,3) when subjected to particular electrical and mechanical boundary conditions. Simple vortex-like, electric-dipole-based topological structures have been observed in dedicated ferroelectric systems, especially ferroelectric-insulator superlattices such as PbTiO3/SrTiO3, which was later shown to be a model system owing to its high depolarizing field(4-8). To date, the electric dipole equivalent of ordered magnetic spin lattices driven by the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMi)(9,10) has not been experimentally observed. Here we examine a domain structure in a single PbTiO3 epitaxial layer sandwiched between SrRuO3 electrodes. We observe periodic clockwise and anticlockwise ferroelectric vortices that are modulated by a second ordering along their toroidal core. The resulting topology, supported by calculations, is a labyrinth-like pattern with two orthogonal periodic modulations that form an incommensurate polar crystal that provides a ferroelectric analogue to the recently discovered incommensurate spin crystals in ferromagnetic materials(11-13). These findings further blur the border between emergent ferromagnetic and ferroelectrictopologies, clearing the way for experimental realization of further electric counterparts of magnetic DMi-driven phases.

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