Stacking Fault Induced Symmetry Breaking in van der Waals Nanowires

ACS Nano. 2022 Dec 27;16(12):21199-21207. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.2c09172. Epub 2022 Nov 22.

Abstract

While traditional ferroelectrics are based on polar crystals in bulk or thin film form, two-dimensional and layered materials can support mechanisms for symmetry breaking between centrosymmetric building blocks, e.g., by creating low-symmetry interfaces in van der Waals stacks. Here, we introduce an approach toward symmetry breaking in van der Waals crystals that relies on the spontaneous incorporation of stacking faults in a nonpolar bulk layer sequence. The concept is realized in nanowires consisting of Se-rich group IV monochalcogenide (GeSe1-xSx) alloys, obtained by vapor-liquid-solid growth. The single crystalline wires adopt a layered structure in which the nonpolar A-B bulk stacking along the nanowire axis is interrupted by single-layer stacking faults with local A-A' stacking. Density functional theory explains this behavior by a reduced stacking fault formation energy in GeSe (or Se-rich GeSe1-xSx alloys). Computations demonstrate that, similar to monochalcogenide monolayers, the inserted A-layers should show a spontaneous electric polarization with a switching barrier consistent with a Curie temperature above room temperature. Second-harmonic generation signals are consistent with a variable density of stacking faults along the wires. Our results point to possible routes for designing ferroelectrics via the layer stacking in van der Waals crystals.

Keywords: Layered crystals; alloy; electron microscopy; germanium selenide; germanium sulfide; planar defects; van der Waals stacking.