- Das, S;
- Tang, YL;
- Hong, Z;
- Gonçalves, MAP;
- McCarter, MR;
- Klewe, C;
- Nguyen, KX;
- Gómez-Ortiz, F;
- Shafer, P;
- Arenholz, E;
- Stoica, VA;
- Hsu, S-L;
- Wang, B;
- Ophus, C;
- Liu, JF;
- Nelson, CT;
- Saremi, S;
- Prasad, B;
- Mei, AB;
- Schlom, DG;
- Íñiguez, J;
- García-Fernández, P;
- Muller, DA;
- Chen, LQ;
- Junquera, J;
- Martin, LW;
- Ramesh, R
Complex topological configurations are fertile ground for exploring emergent phenomena and exotic phases in condensed-matter physics. For example, the recent discovery of polarization vortices and their associated complex-phase coexistence and response under applied electric fields in superlattices of (PbTiO3)n/(SrTiO3)n suggests the presence of a complex, multi-dimensional system capable of interesting physical responses, such as chirality, negative capacitance and large piezo-electric responses1-3. Here, by varying epitaxial constraints, we discover room-temperature polar-skyrmion bubbles in a lead titanate layer confined by strontium titanate layers, which are imaged by atomic-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy. Phase-field modelling and second-principles calculations reveal that the polar-skyrmion bubbles have a skyrmion number of +1, and resonant soft-X-ray diffraction experiments show circular dichroism, confirming chirality. Such nanometre-scale polar-skyrmion bubbles are the electric analogues of magnetic skyrmions, and could contribute to the advancement of ferroelectrics towards functionalities incorporating emergent chirality and electrically controllable negative capacitance.