4.6 Article

Ferroelectric structural transition in hafnium oxide induced by charged oxygen vacancies

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 104, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.104.L180102

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFA0303602]
  2. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences of CAS [ZDBS-LY-SLH008]
  3. National Nature Science Foundation of China [11774360, 11974365]
  4. 3315 program of Ningbo
  5. Westlake Education Foundation
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [12074319]
  7. TsinghuaFoshan Innovation Special Fund (TFISF) [2020THFS0132]

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The discovery of ferroelectric HfO2 in thin films and bulk is a significant breakthrough, but the origin of its ferroelectricity remains debated. The mechanism for stabilizing the polar orthorhombic phase may be related to oxygen vacancies.
The discovery of ferroelectric HfO2 in thin films and more recently in bulk is an important breakthrough because of its silicon compatibility and unexpectedly persistent polarization at low dimensions, but the origin of its ferroelectricity is still under debate. The stabilization of the metastable polar orthorhombic phase was often considered as the cumulative result of various extrinsic factors such as stress, grain boundary, and oxygen vacancies as well as phase transition kinetics during the annealing process. We propose a mechanism to stabilize the polar orthorhombic phase over the nonpolar monoclinic phase that is the bulk ground state. Our first-principles calculations demonstrate that the doubly positively charged oxygen vacancy, an overlooked defect but commonly presenting in binary oxides, is critical for the stabilization of the ferroelectric phase. The charge state of the oxygen vacancy serves as a degree of freedom to control the thermodynamic stability of competing phases of wide band gap oxides.

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