Room temperature ferroelectricity in monolayer graphene sandwiched between hexagonal boron nitride

  • Fanrong Lin
  • , Xiaoyu Xuan
  • , Zhonghan Cao
  • , Zhuhua Zhang
  • , Ying Liu
  • , Minmin Xue
  • , Yang Hang
  • , Xin Liu
  • , Yizhou Zhao
  • , Libo Gao
  • , Wanlin Guo
  • , Yanpeng Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

The ferroelectricity in stacked van der Waals multilayers through interlayer sliding holds great promise for ultrathin high-density memory devices, yet mostly subject to weak polarization and cryogenic operating condition. Here, we demonstrate robust room-temperature ferroelectricity in monolayer graphene sandwiched between hexagonal boron nitride layers with a rhombohedral-like stacking (i.e., ABC-like stacking). The system exhibits an unconventional negative capacitance and record high electric polarization of 1.76 μC/cm2 among reported sliding ferroelectrics to date. The ferroelectricity also exists in similarly sandwiched bilayer and trilayer graphene, yet the polarization is slightly decreased with odd-even parity. Ab initio calculations suggest that the ferroelectricity is associated with a unique switchable co-sliding motion between graphene and adjacent boron nitride layer, in contrast to existing conventional vdW sliding ferroelectrics. As such, the ferroelectricity can sustain up to 325 K and remains intact after 50000 switching cycles in ~300000 s duration at 300 K. These results open a new opportunity to develop ultrathin memory devices based on rhombohedral-like heterostructures.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1189
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025
Externally publishedYes

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