ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Materials with reduced dimensions have been shown to host a wide variety of exotic properties and novel quantum states that often defy textbook wisdom1-5. Ferroelectric polarization and metallicity are well-known examples of mutually exclusive properties that cannot coexist in bulk solids because the net electric field in a metal can be fully screened by free electrons6. An atomically thin metallic layer capped by insulating layers has shown decent conductivity at room temperature7. Moreover, a penetrating polarization field can be employed to induce an ion displacement and create an intrinsic polarization in the metallic layer. Here we demonstrate that a ferroelectric metal can be artificially synthesized through imposing a strong polarization field in the form of ferroelectric/unit-cell-thin metal superlattices. In this way the symmetry of an atomically thin conductive layer can be broken and manipulated by a neighboring polar field, thereby forming a two-dimensional (2D) ferroelectric metal. The fabricated of (SrRuO3)1/(BaTiO3)10 superlattices exhibit ferroelectric polarization in an atomically thin layer with metallic conductivity at room temperature. A multipronged investigation combining structural analyses, electrical measurements, and first-principles electronic structure calculations unravels the coexistence of 2D electrical conductivity in the SrRuO3 monolayer accompanied by the electric polarization. Such 2D ferroelectric metal paves a novel way to engineer a quantum multi-state with unusual coexisting properties, such as ferroelectrics, ferromagnetics and metals, manipulated by external fields8,9.
Polar metals, commonly defined by the coexistence of polar crystal structure and metallicity, are thought to be scarce because the long-range electrostatic fields favoring the polar structure are expected to be fully screened by the conduction electr
Nanoscaled room-temperature ferroelectricity is ideal for developing advanced non-volatile high-density memories. However, reaching the thin film limit in conventional ferroelectrics is a long-standing challenge due to the possible critical thickness
The advent of long-range magnetic order in non-centrosymmetric compounds has stimulated interest in the possibility of exotic spin transport phenomena and topologically protected spin textures for applications in next-generation spintronics. This wor
Integrating multiple properties in a single system is crucial for the continuous developments in electronic devices. However, some physical properties are mutually exclusive in nature. Here, we report the coexistence of two seemingly mutually exclusi
Ferroelectric materials contain a switchable spontaneous polarization that persists even in the absence of an external electric field. The coexistence of ferroelectricity and metallicity in a material appears to be illusive, since polarization is ill