Polar metals as electrodes to suppress the critical-thickness limit in ferroelectric nanocapacitors
Danilo Puggioni, Gianluca Giovannetti, and James M. Rondinelli

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that using polar metals as electrodes in ferroelectric nanocapacitors can eliminate the critical thickness limit, allowing polarization to persist at sub-nanometer scales and enabling further miniaturization of electronic devices.
Contribution
The study introduces the use of polar metals as electrodes to overcome the critical thickness limit in ferroelectric nanocapacitors, supported by electronic structure calculations.
Findings
Polar metals enable ferroelectric polarization at sub-nanometer thicknesses.
Interfacial dipolar coherency is crucial for maintaining polarization.
The critical thickness for ferroelectricity approaches zero with polar metal electrodes.
Abstract
Enhancing the performance of nanoscale ferroelectric (FE) field-effect transistors and FE capacitors for memory devices and logic relies on miniaturizing the metal electrode/ferroelectric area and reducing the thickness of the insulator. Although size reductions improve data retention, deliver lower voltage threshold switching, and increase areal density, they also degrade the functional electric polarization. There is a critical, nanometer length below which the polarization disappears owing to depolarizing field effects. Here we show how to overcome the critical thickness limit imposed on ferroelectricity by utilizing electrodes formed from a novel class of materials known as polar metals. Electronic structure calculations on symmetric polar-metal electrode/FE capacitor structures demonstrate that electric polarizations can persist to the sub-nanometer scale with…
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