TY - JOUR
T1 - Order–Disorder Transitions in a Polar Vortex Lattice
AU - Zhou, Linming
AU - Dai, Cheng
AU - Meisenheimer, Peter
AU - Das, Sujit
AU - Wu, Yongjun
AU - Gómez-Ortiz, Fernando
AU - García-Fernández, Pablo
AU - Huang, Yuhui
AU - Junquera, Javier
AU - Chen, Long Qing
AU - Ramesh, Ramamoorthy
AU - Hong, Zijian
N1 - Funding Information:
L.Z. and C.D. contributed equally to this work. This work was supported by the Joint Funds of the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grant U21A2067 (Y.W.), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. 2021FZZX003‐02‐03, Z.H.). Z.H. also gratefully acknowledge a start‐up grant from Zhejiang University. The financial support from Grant PGC2018‐096955‐B‐C41 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 is acknowledged (J.J., P.G.‐F., F.G.‐O.). F.G.‐O. acknowledge financial support from Grant No. FPU18/04661 funded by Spanish Ministry of Universities. The phase‐field simulation was performed on the MoFang III cluster on Shanghai Supercomputing Center (SSC). S. D. is currently at Materials Research Centre, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India.
Funding Information:
L.Z. and C.D. contributed equally to this work. This work was supported by the Joint Funds of the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grant U21A2067 (Y.W.), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. 2021FZZX003-02-03, Z.H.). Z.H. also gratefully acknowledge a start-up grant from Zhejiang University. The financial support from Grant PGC2018-096955-B-C41 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 is acknowledged (J.J., P.G.-F., F.G.-O.). F.G.-O. acknowledge financial support from Grant No. FPU18/04661 funded by Spanish Ministry of Universities. The phase-field simulation was performed on the MoFang III cluster on Shanghai Supercomputing Center (SSC). S. D. is currently at Materials Research Centre, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2022/5/25
Y1 - 2022/5/25
N2 - Order–disorder transitions are widely explored in various vortex structures in condensed matter physics, that is, in the type-II superconductors and Bose–Einstein condensates. In this study, the ordering of the polar vortex phase in [Pb(Zr0.4Ti0.6)O3]n/(SrTiO3)n (PZT/STO) superlattices is investigated through phase-field simulations. With a large tensile substrate strain, an antiorder vortex state (where the rotation direction of the vortex arrays in the neighboring ferroelectric layers are flipped) is discovered for short-period PZT/STO superlattice. The driving force is the induced in-plane polarization in the STO layers due to the large tensile epitaxial strain. Increasing the periodicity leads to antiorder to disorder transition, resulting from the high energy of the head-to-head/tail-to-tail domain structure in the STO layer. On the other hand, when the periodicity is kept constant in short-period superlattices, the order–disorder–antiorder transition can be engineered by mediating the substrate strain, due to the competition between the induction of out-of-plane (due to interfacial depolarization effect) and in-plane (due to strain) polarization in the STO layer. The 3D ordering of such polar vortices is still a topic of significant current interest and it is envisioned that this study will spur further interest toward the understanding of order–disorder transitions in ferroelectric topological structures.
AB - Order–disorder transitions are widely explored in various vortex structures in condensed matter physics, that is, in the type-II superconductors and Bose–Einstein condensates. In this study, the ordering of the polar vortex phase in [Pb(Zr0.4Ti0.6)O3]n/(SrTiO3)n (PZT/STO) superlattices is investigated through phase-field simulations. With a large tensile substrate strain, an antiorder vortex state (where the rotation direction of the vortex arrays in the neighboring ferroelectric layers are flipped) is discovered for short-period PZT/STO superlattice. The driving force is the induced in-plane polarization in the STO layers due to the large tensile epitaxial strain. Increasing the periodicity leads to antiorder to disorder transition, resulting from the high energy of the head-to-head/tail-to-tail domain structure in the STO layer. On the other hand, when the periodicity is kept constant in short-period superlattices, the order–disorder–antiorder transition can be engineered by mediating the substrate strain, due to the competition between the induction of out-of-plane (due to interfacial depolarization effect) and in-plane (due to strain) polarization in the STO layer. The 3D ordering of such polar vortices is still a topic of significant current interest and it is envisioned that this study will spur further interest toward the understanding of order–disorder transitions in ferroelectric topological structures.
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U2 - 10.1002/adfm.202111392
DO - 10.1002/adfm.202111392
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125087108
SN - 1616-301X
VL - 32
JO - Advanced Functional Materials
JF - Advanced Functional Materials
IS - 22
M1 - 2111392
ER -