Abstract
Although the size effect in ferroelectric thin films has been known for long time, the underlying mechanism is not yet fully understood and whether or not there is a critical thickness below which the ferroelectricity vanishes is still under debate. Here, we directly measure the thickness-dependent polarization in ultrathin PbZr 0.2 Ti 0.8 O 3 films via quantitative annular bright field imaging. We find that the polarization is significantly suppressed for films <10-unit cells thick (â 1/44 nm). However, approximately the polarization never vanishes. The residual polarization is â 1/416 μCcm â '2 (â 1/417%) at 1.5-unit cells (â 1/40.6 nm) thick film on bare SrTiO 3 and â 1/422 μCcm â '2 at 2-unit cells thick film on SrTiO 3 with SrRuO 3 electrode. The residual polarization in these ultrathin films is mainly attributed to the robust covalent Pb-O bond. Our atomic study provides new insights into mechanistic understanding of nanoscale ferroelectricity and the size effects.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gao, P., Zhang, Z., Li, M., Ishikawa, R., Feng, B., Liu, H. J., … Ikuhara, Y. (2017). Possible absence of critical thickness and size effect in ultrathin perovskite ferroelectric films. Nature Communications, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms15549
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.