posted on 2020-04-27, 12:35authored byRohit Batra, Huan Doan Tran, Brienne Johnson, Brandon Zoellner, Paul A. Maggard, Jacob L. Jones, George A. Rossetti, Rampi Ramprasad
The
presence of bistable polarization states along with accessible
switching capabilities make ferroelectrics an ideal candidate for
a variety of applications. Although many conventional ferroelectric
(FE) materials, i.e., perovskite-structure-based oxides, have been
extensively studied over the past several decades, their success has
been limited owing to challenges encountered with scaling down of
devices and compatibility with complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor
(CMOS) processing. Thus, the surprising discovery of ferroelectricity
in thin films (∼30 nm) of hafnia (HfO2), the first
fluorite-structure-type FE material with CMOS compatibility, revived
interest in FE memories, among others. However, the most critical
lesson to be learned from the example of hafnia is that even binary
oxides can be FE if low-lying metastable (or stable) polar phases
are present and accessible. In this contribution, we cast a wider
net (to go beyond hafnia), involving 20 other simple binary nonmagnetic
oxides, in an attempt to systematically reveal (meta)stable polar
phases, if any, in such oxides. We employed a combination of structural
search methods, first-principles computations, and group-theoretical
considerations to find at least five new simple oxides as potential
FE candidatesCaO2 (Pna21, 33), SrO2 (Pna21, 33), Ga2O3 (Pna21, 33), TiO2 (Pca21, 29), and Al2O3 (Pna21, 33) with space
group information included within parentheses. Among them, the thermodynamic
stability and ferroelectric properties of a previously unexplored
candidate, CaO2, was investigated in detail. Structure
refinement from synchrotron X-ray diffraction data confirmed that
CaO2 crystallizes in the Pna21 phase, with structural parameters in agreement with our theoretical
predictions. Finally, we provide an assessment of the potential for
the practical realization of the identified candidate oxides in their
polar phase(s) based our computations presented within the context
of the past empirical/theoretical observations and discuss some challenges
that still need to be overcome to successfully realize ferroelectricity
in simple oxides beyond HfO2 and ZrO2. More
importantly, this work presents a general strategy to search for ferroelectric
or functional materials of any class.