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.
*We thank the generous support of NSERC, CIFAR, the Canada First Research Excellence Fund, Quantum Materials and Future Technologies Program, and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation's EPiQS Initiative through Grant No. GBMF11071.
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Publication: Phys. Rev. Lett. 132, 196801 (2024). Editor's suggestion.
Presenters
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Benjamin Tong Zhou
- University of British Columbia