JOURNAL ARTICLE

Domain wall nanoelectronics

Gustau CatalánJan SeidelR. RameshJ. F. Scott

Year: 2012 Journal:   Reviews of Modern Physics Vol: 84 (1)Pages: 119-156   Publisher: American Physical Society

Abstract

Domains in ferroelectrics were considered to be well understood by the middle of the last century: They were generally rectilinear, and their walls were Ising-like. Their simplicity stood in stark contrast to the more complex Bloch walls or Néel walls in magnets. Only within the past decade and with the introduction of atomic-resolution studies via transmission electron microscopy, electron holography, and atomic force microscopy with polarization sensitivity has their real complexity been revealed. Additional phenomena appear in recent studies, especially of magnetoelectric materials, where functional properties inside domain walls are being directly measured. In this paper these studies are reviewed, focusing attention on ferroelectrics and multiferroics but making comparisons where possible with magnetic domains and domain walls. An important part of this review will concern device applications, with the spotlight on a new paradigm of ferroic devices where the domain walls, rather than the domains, are the active element. Here magnetic wall microelectronics is already in full swing, owing largely to the work of Cowburn and of Parkin and their colleagues. These devices exploit the high domain wall mobilities in magnets and their resulting high velocities, which can be supersonic, as shown by Kreines' and co-workers 30 years ago. By comparison, nanoelectronic devices employing ferroelectric domain walls often have slower domain wall speeds, but may exploit their smaller size as well as their different functional properties. These include domain wall conductivity (metallic or even superconducting in bulk insulating or semiconducting oxides) and the fact that domain walls can be ferromagnetic while the surrounding domains are not. 2012 American Physical Society.

Keywords:
Domain wall (magnetism) Physics Condensed matter physics Magnetic domain Spintronics Domain (mathematical analysis) Ferromagnetism Nanoelectronics Ferroelectricity Nanotechnology Materials science Magnetic field Optoelectronics Magnetization Quantum mechanics

Metrics

1204
Cited By
31.49
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
341
Refs
1.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Multiferroics and related materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Ferroelectric and Piezoelectric Materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Acoustic Wave Resonator Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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