TY - JOUR
T1 - Interfacial ferroelectricity in marginally twisted 2D semiconductors
AU - Weston, Astrid
AU - Castanon Garcia-Roves, Elisa
AU - Enaldiev, Vladimir
AU - Ferreira, Fabio
AU - Bhattacharjee, Shubhadeep
AU - Xu, Shuigang
AU - Corte-León, Héctor
AU - Wu, Zefei
AU - Clark, Nick
AU - Summerfield, Alex
AU - Hashimoto, Teruo
AU - Gao, Yunze
AU - Wang, Wendong
AU - Hamer, Matthew
AU - Read, Harriet
AU - Fumagalli, Laura
AU - Kretinin, Andrey
AU - Haigh, Sarah
AU - Kazakova, Olga
AU - Geim, Andre
AU - Fal'ko, Vladimir
AU - Gorbachev, Roman
N1 - © 2022. The Author(s).
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Twisted heterostructures of two-dimensional crystals offer almost unlimited scope for the design of new metamaterials. Here we demonstrate a room temperature ferroelectric semiconductor that is assembled using mono- or few-layer MoS
2. These van der Waals heterostructures feature broken inversion symmetry, which, together with the asymmetry of atomic arrangement at the interface of two 2D crystals, enables ferroelectric domains with alternating out-of-plane polarization arranged into a twist-controlled network. The last can be moved by applying out-of-plane electrical fields, as visualized in situ using channelling contrast electron microscopy. The observed interfacial charge transfer, movement of domain walls and their bending rigidity agree well with theoretical calculations. Furthermore, we demonstrate proof-of-principle field-effect transistors, where the channel resistance exhibits a pronounced hysteresis governed by pinning of ferroelectric domain walls. Our results show a potential avenue towards room temperature electronic and optoelectronic semiconductor devices with built-in ferroelectric memory functions.
AB - Twisted heterostructures of two-dimensional crystals offer almost unlimited scope for the design of new metamaterials. Here we demonstrate a room temperature ferroelectric semiconductor that is assembled using mono- or few-layer MoS
2. These van der Waals heterostructures feature broken inversion symmetry, which, together with the asymmetry of atomic arrangement at the interface of two 2D crystals, enables ferroelectric domains with alternating out-of-plane polarization arranged into a twist-controlled network. The last can be moved by applying out-of-plane electrical fields, as visualized in situ using channelling contrast electron microscopy. The observed interfacial charge transfer, movement of domain walls and their bending rigidity agree well with theoretical calculations. Furthermore, we demonstrate proof-of-principle field-effect transistors, where the channel resistance exhibits a pronounced hysteresis governed by pinning of ferroelectric domain walls. Our results show a potential avenue towards room temperature electronic and optoelectronic semiconductor devices with built-in ferroelectric memory functions.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85125137770
U2 - 10.1038/s41565-022-01072-w
DO - 10.1038/s41565-022-01072-w
M3 - Article
C2 - 35210566
SN - 1748-3387
VL - 17
SP - 390
EP - 395
JO - Nature Nanotechnology
JF - Nature Nanotechnology
IS - 4
ER -