Electric Field-Manipulated Optical Chirality in Ferroelectric Vortex Domains

  • Haojie Han
  • , Wei Li
  • , Qinghua Zhang
  • , Shiyu Tang
  • , Yue Wang
  • , Zongqi Xu
  • , Yiqun Liu
  • , Hetian Chen
  • , Jingkun Gu
  • , Jing Wang
  • , Di Yi
  • , Lin Gu
  • , Houbing Huang
  • , Ce Wen Nan
  • , Qian Li*
  • , Jing Ma*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Manipulating optical chirality via electric fields has garnered considerable attention in the realm of both fundamental physics and practical applications. Chiral ferroelectrics, characterized by their inherent optical chirality and switchable spontaneous polarization, are emerging as a promising platform for electronic-photonic integrated circuits applications. Unlike organics with chiral carbon centers, integrating chirality into technologically mature inorganic ferroelectrics has posed a long-standing challenge. Here, the successful introduction of chirality is reported into self-assembly La-doped BiFeO3 nanoislands, which exhibit ferroelectric vortex domains. By employing synergistic experimental techniques with piezoresponse force microscopy and nonlinear optical second-harmonic generation probes, a clear correlation between chirality and polarization configuration within these ferroelectric nanoislands is established. Furthermore, the deterministic control of ferroelectric vortex domains and chirality is demonstrated by applying electric fields, enabling reversible and nonvolatile generation and elimination of optically chiral signals. These findings significantly expand the repertoire of field-controllable chiral systems and lay the groundwork for the development of innovative ferroelectric optoelectronic devices.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2408400
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume36
Issue number46
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Nov 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • chirality
  • ferroelectric vortex domains
  • inorganic ferroelectrics
  • nanoislands
  • reversible and nonvolatile control

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