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High-Tc Layered Ferrielectric Crystals by Coherent Spinodal Decomposition
Author(s) -
Michael A. Susner,
Alex Belianinov,
Albina Y. Borisevich,
Qian He,
Marius Chyasnavichyus,
Hakan Demir,
David S. Sholl,
Panchapakesan Ganesh,
D. L. Abernathy,
Michael A. McGuire,
Petro Maksymovych
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.5b05682
Subject(s) - van der waals force , materials science , spinodal decomposition , dielectric , heterojunction , spinodal , chemical physics , phase (matter) , polar , condensed matter physics , nanotechnology , phase transition , crystal (programming language) , optoelectronics , chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , physics , astronomy , computer science , programming language
Research in the rapidly developing field of 2D electronic materials has thus far been focused on metallic and semiconducting materials. However, complementary dielectric materials such as nonlinear dielectrics are needed to enable realistic device architectures. Candidate materials require tunable dielectric properties and pathways for heterostructure assembly. Here we report on a family of cation-deficient transition metal thiophosphates whose unique chemistry makes them a viable prospect for these applications. In these materials, naturally occurring ferrielectric heterostructures composed of centrosymmetric In4/3P2S6 and ferrielectrically active CuInP2S6 are realized by controllable chemical phase separation in van der Waals bonded single crystals. CuInP2S6 by itself is a layered ferrielectric with a ferrielectric transition temperature (Tc) just over room temperature, which rapidly decreases with homogeneous doping. Surprisingly, in our composite materials, the ferrielectric Tc of the polar CuInP2S6 phase increases. This effect is enabled by unique spinodal decomposition that retains the overall van der Waals layered morphology of the crystal, but chemically separates CuInP2S6 and In4/3P2S6 within each layer. The average spatial periodicity of the distinct chemical phases can be finely controlled by altering the composition and/or synthesis conditions. One intriguing prospect for such layered spinodal alloys is large volume synthesis of 2D in-plane heterostructures with periodically alternating polar and nonpolar phases.

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