We present a comprehensive first principles study of doped hafnia in order to understand the formation of ferroelectric orthorhombic[001] grains. Assuming that tetragonal grains are present during the early stages of growth, matching plane analysis shows that tetragonal[100] grains can transform into orthorhombic[001] during thermal annealing when they are laterally confined by other grains. We show that among 0%, 2% and 4% Si doping, 4% doping provides the best conditions for the tetragonal[100] → orthorhombic[001] transformation. This also holds for Al doping. We also show that for HfZrO, where x = 1.00, 0.75, 0.50, 0.25, and 0.00, the value x = 0.50 provides the most favorable conditions for the desired transformation. In order for this transformation to be preferred over the tetragonal[100] → monoclinic[100] transformation, out-of-plane confinement also needs to be present, as supplied by a top electrode. Our findings illuminate the mechanism that causes ferroelectricity in hafnia-based films and provide an explanation for common experimental observations for the optimal ranges of doping in Si:HfO, Al:HfO and HfZrO. We also present model thin film heterostructure computations of Ir/HfO/Ir stacks in order to isolate the interface effects, which we show to be significant.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9cp01880h | DOI Listing |
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