Ferroelectricity and dipole locking in 2D In<sub>2</sub>Se<sub>3</sub> crystal
ORAL
Abstract
Ferroelectricity in ultrathin crystal has been long believed to exhibit rich phase competition physics with quantum confinement and enhanced quasiparticle interactions. Its realization is also critical to scale down memory and develop versatile ferroelectric devices with large electrical and mechanical tunablity1. However, its own depolarizing electrostatic field prevents the existence of out-of-plane ferroelectricity at two-dimensional (2D) limit. Here we report the discovery of out-of-plane 2D ferroelectricity in atomically thin In2Se3 crystal. We experimentally found that in-plane lattice asymmetry and out-of-plane polarization is strictly locked, a new mechanism to stabilize the polar order. Such unique locking enables robust 2D ferroelectricity at ambient conditions and results in a very high transition temperature (~700K). In addition, it also enables electrical manipulation of atomic lattice anisotropy, which is the key to 2D spintronics and valleytronics. This discovery is potentially important to the atomically thin sensors and actuators.
1. Martin, L. W. & Rappe, A. M. Thin-film ferroelectric materials and their applications. Nat. Rev. Mater. 2, 16087 (2016).
1. Martin, L. W. & Rappe, A. M. Thin-film ferroelectric materials and their applications. Nat. Rev. Mater. 2, 16087 (2016).
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Presenters
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Jun Xiao
- Univ of California - Berkeley
- University of California - Berkeley
- UC berkeley