TY - JOUR
T1 - Subterahertz collective dynamics of polar vortices
AU - Li, Qian
AU - Stoica, Vladimir A.
AU - Paściak, Marek
AU - Zhu, Yi
AU - Yuan, Yakun
AU - Yang, Tiannan
AU - McCarter, Margaret R.
AU - Das, Sujit
AU - Yadav, Ajay K.
AU - Park, Suji
AU - Dai, Cheng
AU - Lee, Hyeon Jun
AU - Ahn, Youngjun
AU - Marks, Samuel D.
AU - Yu, Shukai
AU - Kadlec, Christelle
AU - Sato, Takahiro
AU - Hoffmann, Matthias C.
AU - Chollet, Matthieu
AU - Kozina, Michael E.
AU - Nelson, Silke
AU - Zhu, Diling
AU - Walko, Donald A.
AU - Lindenberg, Aaron M.
AU - Evans, Paul G.
AU - Chen, Long Qing
AU - Ramesh, Ramamoorthy
AU - Martin, Lane W.
AU - Gopalan, Venkatraman
AU - Freeland, John W.
AU - Hlinka, Jirka
AU - Wen, Haidan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2021/4/15
Y1 - 2021/4/15
N2 - The collective dynamics of topological structures1–6 are of interest from both fundamental and applied perspectives. For example, studies of dynamical properties of magnetic vortices and skyrmions3,4 have not only deepened our understanding of many-body physics but also offered potential applications in data processing and storage7. Topological structures constructed from electrical polarization, rather than electron spin, have recently been realized in ferroelectric superlattices5,6, and these are promising for ultrafast electric-field control of topological orders. However, little is known about the dynamics underlying the functionality of such complex extended nanostructures. Here, using terahertz-field excitation and femtosecond X-ray diffraction measurements, we observe ultrafast collective polarization dynamics that are unique to polar vortices, with orders-of-magnitude higher frequencies and smaller lateral size than those of experimentally realized magnetic vortices3. A previously unseen tunable mode, hereafter referred to as a vortexon, emerges in the form of transient arrays of nanoscale circular patterns of atomic displacements, which reverse their vorticity on picosecond timescales. Its frequency is considerably reduced (softened) at a critical strain, indicating a condensation (freezing) of structural dynamics. We use first-principles-based atomistic calculations and phase-field modelling to reveal the microscopic atomic arrangements and corroborate the frequencies of the vortex modes. The discovery of subterahertz collective dynamics in polar vortices opens opportunities for electric-field-driven data processing in topological structures with ultrahigh speed and density.
AB - The collective dynamics of topological structures1–6 are of interest from both fundamental and applied perspectives. For example, studies of dynamical properties of magnetic vortices and skyrmions3,4 have not only deepened our understanding of many-body physics but also offered potential applications in data processing and storage7. Topological structures constructed from electrical polarization, rather than electron spin, have recently been realized in ferroelectric superlattices5,6, and these are promising for ultrafast electric-field control of topological orders. However, little is known about the dynamics underlying the functionality of such complex extended nanostructures. Here, using terahertz-field excitation and femtosecond X-ray diffraction measurements, we observe ultrafast collective polarization dynamics that are unique to polar vortices, with orders-of-magnitude higher frequencies and smaller lateral size than those of experimentally realized magnetic vortices3. A previously unseen tunable mode, hereafter referred to as a vortexon, emerges in the form of transient arrays of nanoscale circular patterns of atomic displacements, which reverse their vorticity on picosecond timescales. Its frequency is considerably reduced (softened) at a critical strain, indicating a condensation (freezing) of structural dynamics. We use first-principles-based atomistic calculations and phase-field modelling to reveal the microscopic atomic arrangements and corroborate the frequencies of the vortex modes. The discovery of subterahertz collective dynamics in polar vortices opens opportunities for electric-field-driven data processing in topological structures with ultrahigh speed and density.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41586-021-03342-4
DO - 10.1038/s41586-021-03342-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 33854251
AN - SCOPUS:85104264753
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 592
SP - 376
EP - 380
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7854
ER -