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Abstract
In solids, charge polarity can one-to-one correspond to spin polarity phenomenologically, e.g., ferroelectricity/ferromagnetism, antiferroelectricity/antiferromagnetism, and even dipole-vortex/magnetic-vortex, but ferrielectricity/ferrimagnetism kept telling a disparate story in microscopic level. Since the definition of a charge dipole involves more than one ion, there may be multiple choices for a dipole unit, which makes most ferrielectric orders equivalent to ferroelectric ones, i.e., this ferrielectricity is not necessary to be a real independent branch of polarity. In this work, by using the spherical aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscope, we visualize a nontrivial ferrielectric structural evolution in BaFe2Se3, in which the development of two polar sub-lattices is out-of-sync, for which we term it as irreducible ferrielectricity. Such irreducible ferrielectricity leads to a non-monotonic behavior for the temperature-dependent polarization, and even a compensation point in the ordered state. Our finding unambiguously distinguishes ferrielectrics from ferroelectrics in solids.
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1 Zhejiang University, Center of Electron Microscopy, State Key Laboratory of Silicon Materials, and School of Materials Science and Engineering, Hangzhou, China (GRID:grid.13402.34) (ISNI:0000 0004 1759 700X)
2 Southeast University, School of Physics, Nanjing, China (GRID:grid.263826.b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1761 0489)
3 University of Antwerp, Electron Microscopy for Materials Science (EMAT), Antwerp, Belgium (GRID:grid.5284.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 0790 3681); Wuhan University of Technology, Nanostructure Research Centre (NRC), Wuhan, China (GRID:grid.162110.5) (ISNI:0000 0000 9291 3229)