Ferroelectric domain wall clusters in barium titanate

Abstract

We study ferroelectric domain walls in barium titanate. We search for structurally nontrivial, so-called non-Ising domain walls, where the Polarisation is non-zero along the entire wall. Our approach enables us to find solutions for domain walls in any orientation, and the existence and energy of these walls depend on their particular orientation. We find that, across all phases of the material, there are orientations where the non-Ising walls have lower energy than Ising walls. The most interesting property of these domain walls is their non-monotonic interaction forces, allowing them to form stable domain-wall clusters rather than following standard behavior where domain walls annihilate or repel each other. We found the required external electric field to create the non-Ising configurations. Besides theoretical interest, this unconventional property of domain walls makes them a good candidate for memory application.

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