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review article

Physics and applications of charged domain walls

Bednyakov, Petr S.
•
Sturman, Boris I.
•
Sluka, Tomas  
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November 30, 2018
Npj Computational Materials

The charged domain wall is an ultrathin (typically nanosized) interface between two domains; it carries bound charge owing to a change of normal component of spontaneous polarization on crossing the wall. In contrast to hetero-interfaces between different materials, charged domain walls (CDWs) can be created, displaced, erased, and recreated again in the bulk of a material. Screening of the bound charge with free carriers is often necessary for stability of CDWs, which can result in giant two-dimensional conductivity along the wall. Usually in nominally insulating ferroelectrics, the concentration of free carriers at the walls can approach metallic values. Thus, CDWs can be viewed as ultrathin reconfigurable strongly conductive sheets embedded into the bulk of an insulating material. This feature is highly attractive for future nanoelectronics. The last decade was marked by a surge of research interest in CDWs. It resulted in numerous breakthroughs in controllable and reproducible fabrication of CDWs in different materials, in investigation of CDW properties and charge compensation mechanisms, in discovery of light-induced effects, and, finally, in detection of giant two-dimensional conductivity. The present review is aiming at a concise presentation of the main physical ideas behind CDWs and a brief overview of the most important theoretical and experimental findings in the field.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1038/s41524-018-0121-8
Web of Science ID

WOS:000452922700001

Author(s)
Bednyakov, Petr S.
Sturman, Boris I.
Sluka, Tomas  
Tagantsev, Alexander K.  
Yudin, Petr V.
Date Issued

2018-11-30

Published in
Npj Computational Materials
Volume

4

Start page

65

Subjects

Chemistry, Physical

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Chemistry

•

Materials Science

•

titanate single-crystals

•

ferroelectric domain

•

encountering domains

•

atomic-scale

•

conduction

•

inversion

•

light

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LC  
Available on Infoscience
December 22, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/153151
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