Abstract
Sliding ferroelectricity enables materials with intrinsic centrosymmetric symmetry to generate spontaneous polarization via stacking engineering, extending the family of ferroelectric materials and enriching the field of low-dimensional ferroelectric physics. Vertical ferroelectric domains, where the polarization is perpendicular to atomic motion, have been discovered in twisted bilayers of inversion symmetry broken systems such as hexagonal boron nitride, graphene, and transition metal chalcogenides. In this study, we demonstrate that this symmetry breaking also induces lateral polar networks in twisted bilayer rhombohedral-stacked WSe2, as determined through symmetry considerations and vector piezoresponse force microscopy (V-PFM) results. Lateral polarization (LP) in saddle point (SP) regions forms head-to-tail triangular vortices, exhibiting elliptical domain shapes with widths up to 40 nm. The LP encloses the vertical polarization (VP), forming a network of Bloch-type merons and antimerons. Our work enhances the understanding of domain distribution and polarization orientation in moiré ferroelectrics.
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