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Ferroelectric films usually have phase states and physical properties very different from those of bulk ferroelectrics. Here we propose free-standing ferroelectric-elastic multilayers as a bridge between these two material systems. Using a nonlinear thermodynamic theory, we determine phase states of such multilayers as a function of temperature, misfit strain, and volume fraction fi of ferroelectric material. The numerical calculations performed for two classical ferroelectrics - PbTiO3 and BaTiO3 - demonstrate that polarization states of multilayers in the limiting cases fi -> 0 and fi -> 1 coincide with those of thin films and bulk crystals. At intermediate volume fractions, however, the misfit strain-temperature phase diagrams of multilayers differ greatly from those of epitaxial films. Remarkably, a ferroelectric phase not existing in thin films and bulk crystals can be stabilized in BaTiO3 multilayers. Owing to additional tunable parameter and reduced clamping, ferroelectric multilayers may be superior for a wide range of device applications.
Rare earth nickelates RENiO3 which attract interest due to their sharp metal-insulator phase transition, are instable in bulk form due to the necessity of an important oxygen pressure to stabilize Ni in its 3+ state of oxidation. Here, we report the
We report on successful tests of holographically arranged grating-structures in nanoparticle-polymer composites in the form of 100 microns thin free-standing films, i.e. without sample containers or covers that could cause unwanted absorption/incoher
The current driven motion of skyrmions in MnSi and FeGe thinned single crystals could be initiated at current densities of the order of $10^6$ A/m, five orders of magnitude smaller than for magnetic domain walls. The technologically crucial step of r
We present a segregrated strain model that describes the thickness-dependent dielectric properties of ferroelectric films. Using a phenomenological Landau approach, we present results for two specific materials, making comparison with experiment and
The origin of the unusual 90^o ferroelectric / ferroelastic domains, consistently observed in recent studies on meso and nanoscale free-standing single crystals of BaTiO3 [Schilling et al., Physical Review B, 74, 024115 (2006); Schilling et al., Nano