Creating topological polar structure in a nonpolar matter


الملخص بالإنكليزية

Nontrivial topological structures offer rich playground in condensed matter physics including fluid dynamics, superconductivity, and ferromagnetism, and they promise alternative device configurations for post-Moore spintronics and electronics. Indeed, magnetic skyrmions are actively pursued for high-density data storage, while polar vortices with exotic negative capacitance may enable ultralow power consumption in microelectronics. Following extensive investigations on a variety of magnetic textures including vortices, domain walls and skyrmions in the past decades, studies on polar topologies have taken off in recent years, resulting in discoveries of closure domains, vortices, and skyrmions in ferroelectric materials. Nevertheless, the atomic-scale creation of topological polar structures is largely confined in a single ferroelectric system, PbTiO3 (PTO) with large polarization, casting doubt on the generality of polar topologies and limiting their potential applications. In this work, we successfully create previously unrealized atomic-scale polar antivortices in the nominally nonpolar SrTiO3 (STO), expanding the reaches of topological structures and completing an important missing link in polar topologies. The work shed considerable new insight into the formation of topological polar structures, and offers guidance in searching for new polar textures.

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