Quantum-Geometric Origin of Out-of-Plane Stacking Ferroelectricity
ORAL
Abstract
Stacking ferroelectricity (SFE) has been discovered in a wide range of van der Waals materials and holds promise for applications, including photovoltaics and high-density memory devices. We show that the microscopic origin of out-of-plane stacking ferroelectric polarization can be generally understood as a consequence of a nontrivial Berry phase borne out of an effective Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model description with broken sublattice symmetry, thus elucidating the quantum-geometric origin of polarization in the extremely nonperiodic bilayer limit. Our theory applies to known stacking ferroelectrics such as bilayer transition-metal dichalcogenides in 3𝑅 and 𝑇d phases, as well as general 𝐴𝐵-stacked honeycomb bilayers with staggered sublattice potential. Our explanatory and self-consistent framework based on the quantum-geometric perspective establishes quantitative understanding of out-of-plane SFE materials beyond symmetry principles.
–
Publication: Phys. Rev. Lett. 132, 196801 (2024). Editor's suggestion.
Presenters
-
Benjamin Tong Zhou
University of British Columbia
Authors
-
Benjamin Tong Zhou
University of British Columbia
-
Vedangi B Pathak
University of British Columbia
-
Marcel Franz
University of British Columbia