An Electronically Driven Improper Ferroelectric: Tungsten Bronzes as Microstructural Analogs for the Hexagonal Manganites

Adv Mater. 2019 Oct;31(40):e1903620. doi: 10.1002/adma.201903620. Epub 2019 Aug 7.

Abstract

Since the observation that the properties of ferroic domain walls (DWs) can differ significantly from the bulk materials in which they are formed, it has been realized that domain wall engineering offers exciting new opportunities for nanoelectronics and nanodevice architectures. Here, a novel improper ferroelectric, CsNbW2 O9 , with the hexagonal tungsten bronze structure, is reported. Powder neutron diffraction and symmetry mode analysis indicate that the improper transition (TC = 1100 K) involves unit cell tripling, reminiscent of the hexagonal rare earth manganites. However, in contrast to the manganites, the symmetry breaking in CsNbW2 O9 is electronically driven (i.e., purely displacive) via the second-order Jahn-Teller effect in contrast to the geometrically driven tilt mechanism of the manganites. Nevertheless CsNbW2 O9 displays the same kinds of domain microstructure as those found in the manganites, such as the characteristic six-domain "cloverleaf" vertices and DW sections with polar discontinuities. The discovery of a completely new material system, with domain patterns already known to generate interesting functionality in the manganites, is important for the emerging field of DW nanoelectronics.

Keywords: domain walls; ferroelectrics; improper ferroelectricity; structure-property relationships.