posted on 2024-02-28, 17:03authored byPeter Meisenheimer, Arundhati Ghosal, Eric Hoglund, Zhiyang Wang, Piush Behera, Fernando Gómez-Ortiz, Pravin Kavle, Evguenia Karapetrova, Pablo García-Fernández, Lane W. Martin, Archana Raja, Long-Qing Chen, Patrick E. Hopkins, Javier Junquera, Ramamoorthy Ramesh
The
recent discovery of polar topological structures
has opened
the door for exciting physics and emergent properties. There is, however,
little methodology to engineer stability and ordering in these systems,
properties of interest for engineering emergent functionalities. Notably,
when the surface area is extended to arbitrary thicknesses, the topological
polar texture becomes unstable. Here we show that this instability
of the phase is due to electrical coupling between successive layers.
We demonstrate that this electrical coupling is indicative of an effective
screening length in the dielectric, similar to the conductor–ferroelectric
interface. Controlling the electrostatics of the superlattice interfaces,
the system can be tuned between a pure topological vortex state and
a mixed classical-topological phase. This coupling also enables engineering
coherency among the vortices, not only tuning the bulk phase diagram
but also enabling the emergence of a 3D lattice of polar textures.