3 research outputs found

    Self-consistent theory of nanodomain formation on nonpolar surfaces of ferroelectrics

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    We propose a self-consistent theoretical approach capable to describe the peculiarities of the anisotropic nanodomain formation induced by a charged AFM probe on non-polar cuts of ferroelectrics. The proposed semi-phenomenological approach accounts for the difference of the threshold fields required for the domain wall motion along non-polar X- and Y - cuts, and polar Z - cut of LiNbO3. The effect steams from the fact, that the minimal distance between the equilibrium atomic positions of domain wall and the profile of lattice pinning barrier appeared different for different directions due to the crystallographic anisotropy. Using relaxation-type equation with cubic nonlinearity we calculated the polarization reversal dynamics during the probe-induced nanodomain formation for different threshold field values. The different velocity of domain growth and consequently equilibrium domain sizes on X-, Y- and Z-cuts of LiNbO3 originate from the anisotropy of the threshold field. Note that the smaller is the threshold field the larger are the domain sizes, and the fact allows explaining several times difference in nanodomain length experimentally observed on X- and Y-cuts of LiNbO3. Obtained results can give insight into the nanoscale anisotropic dynamics of polarization reversal in strongly inhomogeneous electric field.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
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