Nature Communications (May 2024)

Reversible flexoelectric domain engineering at the nanoscale in van der Waals ferroelectrics

  • Heng Liu,
  • Qinglin Lai,
  • Jun Fu,
  • Shijie Zhang,
  • Zhaoming Fu,
  • Hualing Zeng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48892-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The universal flexoelectric effect in solids provides a mechanical pathway for controlling electric polarization in ultrathin ferroelectrics, eliminating potential material breakdown from a giant electric field at the nanoscale. One challenge of this approach is arbitrary implementation, which is strongly hindered by one-way switching capability. Here, utilizing the innate flexibility of van der Waals materials, we demonstrate that ferroelectric polarization and domain structures can be mechanically, reversibly, and arbitrarily switched in two-dimensional CuInP2S6 via the nano-tip imprinting technique. The bidirectional flexoelectric control is attributed to the extended tip-induced deformation in two-dimensional systems with innate flexibility at the atomic scale. By employing an elastic substrate, artificial ferroelectric nanodomains with lateral sizes as small as ~80 nm are noninvasively generated in an area of 1 μm2, equal to a density of 31.4 Gbit/in2. Our results highlight the potential applications of van der Waals ferroelectrics in data storage and flexoelectronics.