Ferroelectric domain walls are of great interest as elementary building blocks for future electronic devices due to their intrinsic few-nanometre width, multifunctional properties and field-controlled topology. To realize the electronic functions, domain walls are required to be electrically conducting and addressable non-destructively. However, these properties have been elusive because conducting walls have to be electrically charged, which makes them unstable and uncommon in ferroelectric materials. Here we reveal that spontaneous and recorded domain walls in thin films of lead zirconate and bismuth ferrite exhibit large conductance at microwave frequencies despite being insulating at d.c. We explain this effect by morphological rougheni...
Control over the localised conductance recently observed at ferroelectric domain walls is key for th...
Although enhanced conductivity of ferroelectric domain boundaries has been found in BiFeO3 and Pb(Zr...
Although enhanced conductivity of ferroelectric domain boundaries has been found in BiFeO3 and Pb(Zr...
Ferroelectric domain walls are of great interest as elementary building blocks for future electronic...
Ferroelectric materials exhibit spontaneous polarization that can be switched by electric field. Bey...
Atomically sharp domain walls in ferroelectrics are considered as an ideal platform to realize easy-...
Ferroic materials play an increasingly important role in novel (nano-)electronic applications. Recen...
A new paradigm of domain wall nanoelectronics has emerged recently, in which the domain wall in a fe...
Use of ferroelectric domain-walls in future electronics requires that they are stable, rewritable co...
Domain walls may play an important role in future electronic devices, given their small size as well...
Using conductive and piezoforce microscopy, we reveal a complex picture of electronic transport at w...
Conductive domain walls (DWs) in ferroic oxides as device elements are a highly attractive research ...
Ferroelectrics are materials with a spontaneous electrical polarization, which can be switched by an...
Ferroelectric domain walls have emerged as a new type of interface in which the dynamic characterist...
Room-temperature current-voltage dependence of ultrafine-grained ferroelectric Pb(Zr, Ti)O3 thin fil...
Control over the localised conductance recently observed at ferroelectric domain walls is key for th...
Although enhanced conductivity of ferroelectric domain boundaries has been found in BiFeO3 and Pb(Zr...
Although enhanced conductivity of ferroelectric domain boundaries has been found in BiFeO3 and Pb(Zr...
Ferroelectric domain walls are of great interest as elementary building blocks for future electronic...
Ferroelectric materials exhibit spontaneous polarization that can be switched by electric field. Bey...
Atomically sharp domain walls in ferroelectrics are considered as an ideal platform to realize easy-...
Ferroic materials play an increasingly important role in novel (nano-)electronic applications. Recen...
A new paradigm of domain wall nanoelectronics has emerged recently, in which the domain wall in a fe...
Use of ferroelectric domain-walls in future electronics requires that they are stable, rewritable co...
Domain walls may play an important role in future electronic devices, given their small size as well...
Using conductive and piezoforce microscopy, we reveal a complex picture of electronic transport at w...
Conductive domain walls (DWs) in ferroic oxides as device elements are a highly attractive research ...
Ferroelectrics are materials with a spontaneous electrical polarization, which can be switched by an...
Ferroelectric domain walls have emerged as a new type of interface in which the dynamic characterist...
Room-temperature current-voltage dependence of ultrafine-grained ferroelectric Pb(Zr, Ti)O3 thin fil...
Control over the localised conductance recently observed at ferroelectric domain walls is key for th...
Although enhanced conductivity of ferroelectric domain boundaries has been found in BiFeO3 and Pb(Zr...
Although enhanced conductivity of ferroelectric domain boundaries has been found in BiFeO3 and Pb(Zr...