Gustau Catalán

Gustau Catalán

Institut Català de Nanociència i Nanotecnologia

Experimental Sciences & Mathematics

Gustau Catalán graduated in Physics at the Universitat de Barcelona (1997) and gained his PhD, also in Physics, at the Queen's University of Belfast (2001). This was followed by a one-year round-the-world climbing expedition, the highlights of which were the setting up of a new route in the Dogon country of Mali ("The man with no name", 6c-250 metres, Ouro N'guérou) and the first ascent of a peak in the Indian Himalayas (Draoich Parvat, 6200m, Garwhal). Upon returning to research, he has been a scientist at the Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies (2002-2004), at the University of Groningen (2004-2005) and at the University of Cambridge (2005-2009).  He joined ICREA in 2009 as a Research Professor and leader of the Oxide Nanophysics group at the Institut Català de Nanociencia i Nanotecnologia (ICN2). His research centres on the physics of materials at the nanoscale.


Research interests

A common denominator of my work is the search for original physics and emerging effects at the nanoscale. Recently, most of my research has focused on the effects of strain gradients on electrical polarization (a phenomenon known as flexoelectricity); the European Research Council (ERC) has funded me to set up in Barcelona the world’s first specialized laboratory dedicated to this phenomenon. Prominent discoveries in this area have been the giant flexoelectricity of semiconductors, and the existence of flexoelectricity in bones, where the effect is thought to play a physiological role in bone repair. In parallel, I have also worked on other nanoscale phenomena, mostly to do with ferroelectric oxides: the physics of domain walls (domain wall nanoelectronics), antiferroelectricity and giant photovoltaic effects in polar materials.

Selected publications

– Abdollahi A, Domingo N, Arias I & Catalan G 2019, ‘Converse flexoelectricity yields large piezoresponse force microscopy signals in non-piezoelectric materials’, Nature Communications, 10, 1266.

– Cordero-Edwards K, Kianirad H, Canalias C, Sort JCatalan G 2019, ‘Flexoelectric Fracture-Ratchet Effect in Ferroelectrics’, Physical Review Letters, 122, 13, 135502.

– Menendez E, Sireus V, Quintana A, Fina I, Casals B, Cichelero R, Kataja M, Stengel M, Herranz G, Catalan G, Baro MD, Surinach S & Sort J 2019, ‘Disentangling Highly Asymmetric Magnetoelectric Effects in Engineered Multiferroic Heterostructures’, Physical Review Applied, 12, 1, 014041.

– Everhardt AS, Damerio S, Zorn JA, Zhou S, Domingo N, Catalan G, Salje EKH, Chen L & Noheda B 2019, ‘Periodicity-Doubling Cascades: Direct Observation in Ferroelastic Materials’, Physical Review Letters, 123, 8, 087603.

Catalan G & Noheda B 2019, ‘Surface polarization feels the heat‘. Nature Vol 575, pp. 600.

– Langenberg E et al. 2019, ‘Ferroelectric Domain Walls in PbTiO3 Are Effective Regulators of Heat Flow at Room Temperature‘, Nano Letters, 19, 11, 7901-7907.


Selected research activities

-International Symposium on Integrated Functionalities (ISIF), Dublin “Flexoelectricity: one size fits all” (Keynote)

-Joint ISAF-ICE-EMF-IWPM-PFM meeting, Lausanne. “Flexoelectricity: beyond bending oxides” (IS)

-International School of Oxide Electronics (ISOE), Cargese (Corsica) “Introduction to Ferroelectrics” and “Flexoelectricity” (two seminars).

-International Workshop on Topological Structures in Ferroic Materials (TOPO 2019), Prague. “Metal-insulator phase boundaries in VO2 films” (IS).

-Workshop on Ferroic Domain Walls, Venice. “Boundaries in antiferroelectrics, metal-insulator materials and other strange beasts” (IS)