Tunable electroresistance and electro-optic effects of transparent molecular ferroelectrics
Author(s) -
Zhuolei Zhang,
PengFei Li,
YuanYuan Tang,
Andrew J. Wilson,
Katherine A. Willets,
Manfred Wuttig,
RenGen Xiong,
Shenqiang Ren
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1701008
Subject(s) - ferroelectricity , materials science , thin film , polarization (electrochemistry) , refractive index , optoelectronics , supersaturation , condensed matter physics , nanotechnology , chemical physics , dielectric , chemistry , thermodynamics , physics
Recent progress in molecular ferroelectrics (MOFEs) has been overshadowed by the lack of high-quality thin films for device integration. We report a water-based air-processable technique to prepare large-area MOFE thin films, controlled by supersaturation growth at the liquid-air interface under a temperature gradient and external water partial pressure. We used this technique to fabricate ImClO4 thin films and found a large, tunable room temperature electroresistance: a 20-fold resistance variation upon polarization switching. The as-grown films are transparent and consist of a bamboo-like structure of (2, ,0) and (1,0, ) structural variants of R3m symmetry with a reversible polarization of 6.7 μC/cm2. The resulting ferroelectric domain structure leads to a reversible electromechanical response of d33 = 38.8 pm/V. Polarization switching results in a change of the refractive index, n, of single domains, . The remarkable combination of these characteristics renders MOFEs a prime candidate material for new nanoelectronic devices. The information that we present in this work will open a new area of MOFE thin-film technologies.
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