Possible absence of critical thickness and size effect in ultrathin perovskite ferroelectric films

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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.

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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

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