Abstract

We present a theoretical study on the influence of the flexoelectric coupling on the spatial distribution and temperature behavior of the spontaneous polarization for several types of stable domain structure in thin ferroelectric films, such as stripe domains and vortices. Finite-element modeling (FEM) for ${\mathrm{BaTiO}}_{3}$ films and analytical calculations within the Landau-Ginzburg-Devonshire approach reveals that an out-of-plane polarization component can be very sensitive to the flexoelectric coupling for periodic quasi-2D stripe domains and 3D vortex-antivortex structures. However, the influence is rather different for these structures. The flexoelectric coupling increases significantly the amplitude of a small out-of-plane polarization component in the stripe domains, and the ``up'' or ``down'' direction of the component is defined by the sign of the flexoelectric coefficients. Concerning the vortex-antivortex pairs, their antivortices with in-plane anti\cyrchar\cyrs{}irculation have smooth wide dipolar cores through the entire film, whose shape and other features are almost insensitive to the coupling. The vortices with in-plane vorticity have spikelike cores with an out-of-plane quadrupolar moment induced by the flexoelectric coupling. The cores are located near the film--dead-layer interfaces. FEM results corroborated by analytical calculations prove that a change of the flexoelectric coefficient sign leads to a reorientation of the core axial polarization, making the flexosensitive 3D vortices similar to the recently introduced ``flexons'' in cylindrical nanoparticles. The relatively wide temperature range (from 200 to 400 K) of the flexosensitive vortices' existence gives us confidence that they can be observed experimentally in thin ferroelectric films by scanning-probe and nonlinear optical microscopy methods.

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