Researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Cambridge have unveiled the existence of an intriguing link between ferroelectric domain walls and electron interactions in a type of van der Waals 2D material. A domain wall is a boundary or interface separating regions inside a material that exhibit different orientations of ferroelectric polarization. The link discovered by the researchers gives rise to a new type of superconductivity that is unique to these 2D materials. "We showed that places like domain walls, typically associated with irregularities and potentially harmful for things like superconductivity, can indeed be helpful for superconductivity," said Gaurav Chaudhary and Ivar Martin, the two authors of this study.
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