| Literature DB >> 30038286 |
Zaiyao Fei1, Wenjin Zhao1, Tauno A Palomaki1, Bosong Sun1, Moira K Miller1, Zhiying Zhao2,3, Jiaqiang Yan2, Xiaodong Xu1,4, David H Cobden5.
Abstract
A ferroelectric is a material with a polar structure whose polarity can be reversed (switched) by applying an electric field1,2. In metals, itinerant electrons screen electrostatic forces between ions, which explains in part why polar metals are very rare3-7. Screening also excludes external electric fields, apparently ruling out the possibility of ferroelectric switching. However, in principle, a thin enough polar metal could be sufficiently penetrated by an electric field to have its polarity switched. Here we show that the topological semimetal WTe2 provides an embodiment of this principle. Although monolayer WTe2 is centro-symmetric and thus non-polar, the stacked bulk structure is polar. We find that two- or three-layer WTe2 exhibits spontaneous out-of-plane electric polarization that can be switched using gate electrodes. We directly detect and quantify the polarization using graphene as an electric-field sensor8. Moreover, the polarization states can be differentiated by conductivity and the carrier density can be varied to modify the properties. The temperature at which polarization vanishes is above 350 kelvin, and even when WTe2 is sandwiched between graphene layers it retains its switching capability at room temperature, demonstrating a robustness suitable for applications in combination with other two-dimensional materials9-12.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30038286 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0336-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962