Electric field control of labyrinth domain structures in core-shell ferroelectric nanoparticles
Anna N. Morozovska, Eugene A. Eliseev, Salia Cherifi-Hertel, Dean R., Evans, and Riccardo Hertel

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that external electric fields can manipulate labyrinth domain structures in ferroelectric nanoparticles, revealing potential applications in nanoelectronics and cryptography through controlled domain polarity and chirality.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework showing electric field control of labyrinth domains in core-shell ferroelectric nanoparticles using the LGD approach.
Findings
Labyrinth domains can be stabilized by specific screening lengths and core sizes.
Electric fields can induce reversible changes in labyrinth domain polarity.
Negative dielectric susceptibility and potential negative capacitance effects are observed.
Abstract
In the framework of the Landau-Ginzburg-Devonshire (LGD) approach, we studied the possibility of controlling the polarity and chirality of equilibrium domain structures by a homogeneous external electric field in a nanosized ferroelectric core covered with an ultra-thin shell of screening charge. Under certain screening lengths and core sizes, the minimum of the LGD energy, which consists of Landau-Devonshire energy, Ginzburg polarization gradient energy, and electrostatic terms, leads to the spontaneous appearance of stable labyrinth domain structures in the core. The labyrinths evolve from an initial polarization distribution consisting of arbitrarily small randomly oriented nanodomains. The equilibrium labyrinth structure is weakly influenced by details of the initial polarization distribution, such that one can obtain a quasi-continuum of nearly degenerate labyrinth structures,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFerroelectric and Piezoelectric Materials · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions · Acoustic Wave Resonator Technologies
