Abstract
Ferroelectricity in Hf0.5Zr0.5O2 (HZO) originates from a polymorphic landscape where the metastable orthorhombic phase competes with monoclinic and tetragonal forms, making functional properties highly sensitive to structural instability. Recent strategies have exploited ionic-vacancy mechanisms, either through redox interactions with the environment or by employing ferroionic heterostructures, to enhance ferroelectric performance. Here, we embrace the ferroionic heterostructure approach and demonstrate that dynamic oxygen-vacancy exchange at epitaxial junctions produces an active interplay between ferroelectric and ionic layers. Epitaxial heterostructures with La0.67Sr0.33MnO3-δ (LSMO), yttria-stabilized ZrO2-δ (YSZ), and Gd-doped CeO2-δ (CGO) reveal coupled electro-chemo-mechanical responses, including ferroelectric diode characteristics and subtle lattice distortions. Epitaxial fluorite-fluorite interfaces act as vacancy-exchange gates that bias polymorphism, enhance polarization, strengthen piezoelectric response, and suppress leakage, in contrast to the electronically dominated perovskite-fluorite junctions. These findings show that ferroionic heterostructures host reciprocal vacancy-driven dynamics, establishing them as a platform for defect-programmable ferroelectricity and tunable functionality in hafnia-based oxides.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e30176 |
| Journal | Advanced Functional Materials |
| ISSN | 1616-301X |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - 2026 |
Keywords
- Defect engineering
- Dynamic tuning
- Epitaxial heterostructures
- Ferroionic interfaces
- Hafnia ferroelectrics
- Oxygen vacancies
- Polymorphism control
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