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Main Authors: Rahaman, Mohammad M., Flores, Jose, Noor, Mohamed Y., Adnan, Md Mohsinur R., Blackston, Alex, Chowdhury, Enam, Myers, Roberto C., Newburger, Michael, Gouma, Pelagia-Irene
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02598
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author Rahaman, Mohammad M.
Flores, Jose
Noor, Mohamed Y.
Adnan, Md Mohsinur R.
Blackston, Alex
Chowdhury, Enam
Myers, Roberto C.
Newburger, Michael
Gouma, Pelagia-Irene
author_facet Rahaman, Mohammad M.
Flores, Jose
Noor, Mohamed Y.
Adnan, Md Mohsinur R.
Blackston, Alex
Chowdhury, Enam
Myers, Roberto C.
Newburger, Michael
Gouma, Pelagia-Irene
contents A unique polymorph of binary tungsten trioxide, the epsilon phase of WO3, has non-centrosymmetric ferroelectric structure, typically stable below -43 degree C in bulk. We have stabilized the epsilon-WO3 at room temperature (RT) and nanostructured powders via flame spray pyrolysis synthesis. These nanopowders are drop cast into uniform thin films to enable RT measurement of ferroelectric and optoelectronic properties. We report ferroelectric hysteresis, nanoscale domains, and dipole switching measured via Piezo-response force microscopy (PFM). The epsilon-WO3 films also display optical second harmonic generation (SHG) and anticlockwise ferroelectric butterfly capacitance versus voltage hysteresis, further demonstrating the ferroelectric nature of epsilon-WO3. Remarkably, epsilon-WO3 shows ferroelectric polarization responses to optical stimuli and form bipolaron at RT, a spin-zero quasiparticle previously found only in cryogenic temperatures. The bipolaron formation and its interaction with electro-optical stimuli results in a single layer solid-state blue coloration, a ferrochromic effect. A mechanism of the ferrochromic effect is discussed. In summary, epsilon-WO3 appears to be a ferroelectric with the simplest structure, forming bosonic spin-zero bipolaron at RT, and it's dipoles respond to opto-electrical signals; therefore, this material holds significant promise for transforming the field of optoelectronics.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_02598
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Ferroelectric Epsilon-WO3 Nanoparticles and Its Bipolaron Driven Opto-electronic Properties at Room Temperature
Rahaman, Mohammad M.
Flores, Jose
Noor, Mohamed Y.
Adnan, Md Mohsinur R.
Blackston, Alex
Chowdhury, Enam
Myers, Roberto C.
Newburger, Michael
Gouma, Pelagia-Irene
Materials Science
Applied Physics
A unique polymorph of binary tungsten trioxide, the epsilon phase of WO3, has non-centrosymmetric ferroelectric structure, typically stable below -43 degree C in bulk. We have stabilized the epsilon-WO3 at room temperature (RT) and nanostructured powders via flame spray pyrolysis synthesis. These nanopowders are drop cast into uniform thin films to enable RT measurement of ferroelectric and optoelectronic properties. We report ferroelectric hysteresis, nanoscale domains, and dipole switching measured via Piezo-response force microscopy (PFM). The epsilon-WO3 films also display optical second harmonic generation (SHG) and anticlockwise ferroelectric butterfly capacitance versus voltage hysteresis, further demonstrating the ferroelectric nature of epsilon-WO3. Remarkably, epsilon-WO3 shows ferroelectric polarization responses to optical stimuli and form bipolaron at RT, a spin-zero quasiparticle previously found only in cryogenic temperatures. The bipolaron formation and its interaction with electro-optical stimuli results in a single layer solid-state blue coloration, a ferrochromic effect. A mechanism of the ferrochromic effect is discussed. In summary, epsilon-WO3 appears to be a ferroelectric with the simplest structure, forming bosonic spin-zero bipolaron at RT, and it's dipoles respond to opto-electrical signals; therefore, this material holds significant promise for transforming the field of optoelectronics.
title Ferroelectric Epsilon-WO3 Nanoparticles and Its Bipolaron Driven Opto-electronic Properties at Room Temperature
topic Materials Science
Applied Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02598