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What’s that swirly pattern? It’s a moiré, and it has potential power

  • Apr 23
  • 2 min read
Wave-like patterns can appear on computer screen when pixels do not align. @P Sharma (Flinders University)
Wave-like patterns can appear on computer screen when pixels do not align. @P Sharma (Flinders University)

Just as wave-like patterns can appear on computer screen when pixels do not align, new research led by Flinders University is investigating atomic-scale ‘moiré patterns’ in the promising field of ferroelectricity.

The new study, with experts at Monash University and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, seeks inroads into electrical and optical science by exploring these complex ‘superlattice’ patterns in various ways to create new energy and material capabilities.


“Similar to the pixel example, we can overlay single-atom thin layers in non-aligned ways to achieve physical properties not present in regular repetitive materials – including superconductivity, special insulating and conductive states, and ferroelecticity,” says Dr Pankaj Sharma, from the Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology at Flinders University.


“We do not fully understand how these structures behave, but early experiments reveal some unusual electronic and optical effects – suggesting that moiré ferroelectric materials could play an important role in future low-energy nanoelectronics and photonics applications.”


Alongside magnetism, ferroelectricity involves electrical charges within the metal material instead of magnetic poles.  In certain materials, tiny electric dipoles line up to create an electric polarisation which can be switched around using an applied voltage.


The new moiré materials also had the potential to be engineered to carry ferroelectricity and polarisation in many complex ways – both in the individual layers and chiral textures at nanoscale. @Flinders University
The new moiré materials also had the potential to be engineered to carry ferroelectricity and polarisation in many complex ways – both in the individual layers and chiral textures at nanoscale. @Flinders University

The latest research, published in Small Structures, used advanced microscopy and other techniques to explore polarisation textures and the conditions under which they form in moiré materials.


Coauthor Josh Edwards, a physics PhD student in the Sharma Lab, says the potential impact of carefully stacked thin layers on top of each other is significant.


“These tiny polar structures can respond very quickly to a range of external stimuli and could therefore potentially outperform similar magnetic structures that are currently being explored for computing technologies such as high-density memory and brain-inspired computing systems,” he says.


The new moiré materials also had the potential to be engineered to carry ferroelectricity and polarisation in many complex ways – both in the individual layers and chiral textures at nanoscale. 


Reference

Topological Polar Textures in van der Waals Moiré Superlattices

Josh Edwards, Daniel Bennett, Michael S Fuhrer, Mark T Edmonds, and Pankaj Sharma


Flinders University


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