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Effect of Dopant Ordering on the Stability of Ferroelectric Hafnia

Sangita Dutta, Hugo Aramberri, Tony Schenk, Jorge Íñiguez

2020physica status solidi (RRL) - Rapid Research Letters28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Films of the all‐important compound hafnia (HfO 2 ) can be prepared in an orthorhombic ferroelectric (FE) state that is ideal for applications, e.g., in memories or negative‐capacitance field‐effect transistors. The origin of this FE state remains a mystery, though, as none of the proposed mechanisms for its stabilization—from surface and size effects to formation kinetics—is fully convincing. Interestingly, it is known that doping HfO 2 with various cations favors the occurrence of the FE polymorph; however, existing first‐principles works suggest that doping by itself is not sufficient to stabilize the polar phase over the usual nonpolar monoclinic ground state. Herein, first‐principles methods are used to re‐examine this question. Two representative isovalent substitutional dopants, Si and Zr, are considered, and their preferred arrangement within the HfO 2 lattice is studied. The results reveal that small atoms like Si can adopt very stable configurations (forming layers within specific crystallographic planes) in the FE orthorhombic phase of HfO 2 but comparatively less so in the nonpolar monoclinic one. Further, it is found that, at low concentrations, such a dopant ordering yields a FE ground state, the usual paraelectric phase becoming a higher‐energy metastable polymorph. The implications of the findings are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

HafniaOrthorhombic crystal systemMonoclinic crystal systemFerroelectricityDopantMaterials scienceMetastabilityCrystallographyDopingPhase (matter)Ground stateCondensed matter physicsCrystal structureLattice (music)PopulationDielectricIsostructuralChemical physicsPerovskite (structure)AntiferroelectricityFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance DevicesSemiconductor materials and devicesFerroelectric and Piezoelectric Materials