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Enhanced ferroelectricity in ultrathin films grown directly on silicon 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7804) : 478-+
作者:  Arnold, Fabian M.;  Weber, Miriam S.;  Gonda, Imre;  Gallenito, Marc J.;  Adenau, Sophia;  Egloff, Pascal;  Zimmermann, Iwan;  Hutter, Cedric A. J.;  Huerlimann, Lea M.;  Peters, Eike E.;  Piel, Joern;  Meloni, Gabriele;  Medalia, Ohad;  Seeger, Markus A.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:49/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Ultrathin ferroelectric materials could potentially enable low-power perovskite ferroelectric tetragonality logic and nonvolatile memories(1,2). As ferroelectric materials are made thinner, however, the ferroelectricity is usually suppressed. Size effects in ferroelectrics have been thoroughly investigated in perovskite oxides-the archetypal ferroelectric system(3). Perovskites, however, have so far proved unsuitable for thickness scaling and integration with modern semiconductor processes(4). Here we report ferroelectricity in ultrathin doped hafnium oxide (HfO2), a fluorite-structure oxide grown by atomic layer deposition on silicon. We demonstrate the persistence of inversion symmetry breaking and spontaneous, switchable polarization down to a thickness of one nanometre. Our results indicate not only the absence of a ferroelectric critical thickness but also enhanced polar distortions as film thickness is reduced, unlike in perovskite ferroelectrics. This approach to enhancing ferroelectricity in ultrathin layers could provide a route towards polarization-driven memories and ferroelectric-based advanced transistors. This work shifts the search for the fundamental limits of ferroelectricity to simpler transition-metal oxide systems-that is, from perovskite-derived complex oxides to fluorite-structure binary oxides-in which '  reverse'  size effects counterintuitively stabilize polar symmetry in the ultrathin regime.


Enhanced switchable ferroelectric polarization is achieved in doped hafnium oxide films grown directly onto silicon using low-temperature atomic layer deposition, even at thicknesses of just one nanometre.


  
Spontaneous gyrotropic electronic order in a transition-metal dichalcogenide 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7796) : 545-+
作者:  Kum, Hyun S.;  Lee, Hyungwoo;  Kim, Sungkyu;  Lindemann, Shane;  Kong, Wei;  Qiao, Kuan;  Chen, Peng;  Irwin, Julian;  Lee, June Hyuk;  Xie, Saien;  Subramanian, Shruti;  Shim, Jaewoo;  Bae, Sang-Hoon;  Choi, Chanyeol;  Ranno, Luigi;  Seo, Seungju;  Lee, Sangho;  Bauer, Jackson;  Li, Huashan;  Lee, Kyusang;  Robinson, Joshua A.;  Ross, Caroline A.;  Schlom, Darrell G.;  Rzchowski, Mark S.;  Eom, Chang-Beom;  Kim, Jeehwan
收藏  |  浏览/下载:10/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Chirality is ubiquitous in nature, and populations of opposite chiralities are surprisingly asymmetric at fundamental levels(1,2). Examples range from parity violation in the subatomic weak force to homochirality in biomolecules. The ability to achieve chirality-selective synthesis (chiral induction) is of great importance in stereochemistry, molecular biology and pharmacology(2). In condensed matter physics, a crystalline electronic system is geometrically chiral when it lacks mirror planes, space-inversion centres or rotoinversion axes(1). Typically, geometrical chirality is predefined by the chiral lattice structure of a material, which is fixed on formation of the crystal. By contrast, in materials with gyrotropic order(3-6), electrons spontaneously organize themselves to exhibit macroscopic chirality in an originally achiral lattice. Although such order-which has been proposed as the quantum analogue of cholesteric liquid crystals-has attracted considerable interest(3-15), no clear observation or manipulation of gyrotropic order has been achieved so far. Here we report the realization of optical chiral induction and the observation of a gyrotropically ordered phase in the transition-metal dichalcogenide semimetal 1T-TiSe2. We show that shining mid-infrared circularly polarized light on 1T-TiSe2 while cooling it below the critical temperature leads to the preferential formation of one chiral domain. The chirality of this state is confirmed by the measurement of an out-of-plane circular photogalvanic current, the direction of which depends on the optical induction. Although the role of domain walls requires further investigation with local probes, the methodology demonstrated here can be applied to realize and control chiral electronic phases in other quantum materials(4,16).


Optical chiral induction and spontaneous gyrotropic electronic order are realized in the transition-metal chalcogenide 1T-TiSe2 by using illumination with mid-infrared circularly polarized light and simultaneous cooling below the critical temperature.


  
Bacterial coexistence driven by motility and spatial competition 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7796) : 588-+
作者:  Micke, P.;  Leopold, T.;  King, S. A.;  Benkler, E.;  Spiess, L. J.;  Schmoeger, L.;  Schwarz, M.;  Crespo Lopez-Urrutia, J. R.;  Schmidt, P. O.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Elucidating elementary mechanisms that underlie bacterial diversity is central to ecology(1,2) and microbiome research(3). Bacteria are known to coexist by metabolic specialization(4), cooperation(5) and cyclic warfare(6-8). Many species are also motile(9), which is studied in terms of mechanism(10,11), benefit(12,13), strategy(14,15), evolution(16,17) and ecology(18,19). Indeed, bacteria often compete for nutrient patches that become available periodically or by random disturbances(2,20,21). However, the role of bacterial motility in coexistence remains unexplored experimentally. Here we show that-for mixed bacterial populations that colonize nutrient patches-either population outcompetes the other when low in relative abundance. This inversion of the competitive hierarchy is caused by active segregation and spatial exclusion within the patch: a small fast-moving population can outcompete a large fast-growing population by impeding its migration into the patch, while a small fast-growing population can outcompete a large fast-moving population by expelling it from the initial contact area. The resulting spatial segregation is lost for weak growth-migration trade-offs and a lack of virgin space, but is robust to population ratio, density and chemotactic ability, and is observed in both laboratory and wild strains. These findings show that motility differences and their trade-offs with growth are sufficient to promote diversity, and suggest previously undescribed roles for motility in niche formation and collective expulsion-containment strategies beyond individual search and survival.


In mixed bacterial populations that colonize nutrient patches, a growth-migration trade-off can lead to spatial exclusion that provides an advantage to populations that become rare, thereby stabilizing the community.


  
Genomic hallmarks of localized, non-indolent prostate cancer 期刊论文
NATURE, 2017, 541 (7637) : 359-+
作者:  Fraser, Michael;  39;Costa, Alister;  39;ng, Christine
收藏  |  浏览/下载:4/0  |  提交时间:2019/11/27
Continuous-wave lasing in colloidal quantum dot solids enabled by facet-selective epitaxy 期刊论文
NATURE, 2017, 544 (7648) : 75-+
作者:  Fan, Fengjia;  Voznyy, Oleksandr;  Sabatini, Randy P.;  Bicanic, Kristopher T.;  Adachi, Michael M.;  McBride, James R.;  Reid, Kemar R.;  Park, Young-Shin;  Li, Xiyan;  Jain, Ankit;  Quintero-Bermudez, Rafael;  Saravanapavanantham, Mayuran;  Liu, Min;  Korkusinski, Marek;  Hawrylak, Pawel;  Klimov, Victor I.;  Rosenthal, Sandra J.;  Hoogland, Sjoerd;  Sargent, Edward H.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:7/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09