TY - JOUR
T1 - Visualization of large-scale charged domain Walls in hexagonal manganites
AU - Fan, Fei
AU - Gao, Ziyan
AU - Ponet, Louis
AU - Wang, Jing
AU - Huang, Houbing
AU - Artyukhin, Sergey
AU - Hong, Jiawang
AU - Cheong, Sang Wook
AU - Wang, Xueyun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Author(s).
PY - 2021/2/15
Y1 - 2021/2/15
N2 - A ferroelectric charged domain wall (CDW) carries bound charges, originating from the variation of the normal components of polarization across the domain boundary, leading to a possible two-dimensional conductive interface in insulating materials. The ferroelectric CDW can be precisely created, erased, and manipulated, therefore offering an intriguing pathway toward the design of nano-devices. However, due to rather large energy costs, the size of the CDW is usually on the nanoscale. Here, taking flux-grown ferroelectric hexagonal manganites (h-RMnO3) as an example, we creatively adopted an accessible inclined polishing process to reveal the domain evolution of stripe, loop, and vortex domain patterns by depth profiling. Interestingly, we observed an unexpected large-scale straight CDW in as-grown LuMnO3 with length up to a millimeter size, which may result from the "polar catastrophe"during the flux growth. The large-scale CDW has a residual influence on the formation of the loop domain when the crystal anneals below the ferroelectric transition temperature, but completely disappears as the topological vortices emerge. The observed large-scale CDWs make h-RMnO3 a potential candidate for advanced electronic devices, leading to a panoply of desired properties.
AB - A ferroelectric charged domain wall (CDW) carries bound charges, originating from the variation of the normal components of polarization across the domain boundary, leading to a possible two-dimensional conductive interface in insulating materials. The ferroelectric CDW can be precisely created, erased, and manipulated, therefore offering an intriguing pathway toward the design of nano-devices. However, due to rather large energy costs, the size of the CDW is usually on the nanoscale. Here, taking flux-grown ferroelectric hexagonal manganites (h-RMnO3) as an example, we creatively adopted an accessible inclined polishing process to reveal the domain evolution of stripe, loop, and vortex domain patterns by depth profiling. Interestingly, we observed an unexpected large-scale straight CDW in as-grown LuMnO3 with length up to a millimeter size, which may result from the "polar catastrophe"during the flux growth. The large-scale CDW has a residual influence on the formation of the loop domain when the crystal anneals below the ferroelectric transition temperature, but completely disappears as the topological vortices emerge. The observed large-scale CDWs make h-RMnO3 a potential candidate for advanced electronic devices, leading to a panoply of desired properties.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85100912457&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1063/5.0040512
DO - 10.1063/5.0040512
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85100912457
SN - 0003-6951
VL - 118
JO - Applied Physics Letters
JF - Applied Physics Letters
IS - 7
M1 - 072901
ER -