Literature DB >> 31268678

Quantitative Electromechanical Atomic Force Microscopy.

Liam Collins1, Yongtao Liu1,2, Olga S Ovchinnikova1, Roger Proksch3.   

Abstract

The ability to probe a material's electromechanical functionality on the nanoscale is critical to applications from energy storage and computing to biology and medicine. Voltage-modulated atomic force microscopy (VM-AFM) has become a mainstay characterization tool for investigating these materials due to its ability to locally probe electromechanically responsive materials with spatial resolution from micrometers to nanometers. However, with the wide popularity of VM-AFM techniques such as piezoresponse force microscopy and electrochemical strain microscopy there has been a rise in reports of nanoscale electromechanical functionality, including hysteresis, in materials that should be incapable of exhibiting piezo- or ferroelectricity. Explanations for the origins of unexpected nanoscale phenomena have included new material properties, surface-mediated polarization changes, and/or spatially resolved behavior that is not present in bulk measurements. At the same time, it is well known that VM-AFM measurements are susceptible to numerous forms of crosstalk, and, despite efforts within the AFM community, a global approach for eliminating this has remained elusive. In this work, we develop a method for easily demonstrating the presence of hysteretic (i.e., "false ferroelectric") long-range interactions between the sample and cantilever body. This method should be easy to implement in any VM-AFM measurement. We then go on to demonstrate fully quantitative and repeatable nanoelectromechanical characterization using an interferometer. These quantitative measurements are critical for a wide range of devices including MEMS actuators and sensors, memristor, energy storage, and memory.

Keywords:  atomic force microscopy; electrochemical strain microscopy; hysteresis; nonlocal effects; piezoresponse force microscopy

Year:  2019        PMID: 31268678     DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b02883

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  5 in total

1.  Enhanced ferroelectricity in ultrathin films grown directly on silicon.

Authors:  Suraj S Cheema; Daewoong Kwon; Nirmaan Shanker; Roberto Dos Reis; Shang-Lin Hsu; Jun Xiao; Haigang Zhang; Ryan Wagner; Adhiraj Datar; Margaret R McCarter; Claudy R Serrao; Ajay K Yadav; Golnaz Karbasian; Cheng-Hsiang Hsu; Ava J Tan; Li-Chen Wang; Vishal Thakare; Xiang Zhang; Apurva Mehta; Evguenia Karapetrova; Rajesh V Chopdekar; Padraic Shafer; Elke Arenholz; Chenming Hu; Roger Proksch; Ramamoorthy Ramesh; Jim Ciston; Sayeef Salahuddin
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-04-22       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Mechanical breathing in organic electrochromics.

Authors:  Xiaokang Wang; Ke Chen; Luize Scalco de Vasconcelos; Jiazhi He; Yung C Shin; Jianguo Mei; Kejie Zhao
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-01-10       Impact factor: 14.919

3.  Voltage controlled Néel vector rotation in zero magnetic field.

Authors:  Ather Mahmood; Will Echtenkamp; Mike Street; Jun-Lei Wang; Shi Cao; Takashi Komesu; Peter A Dowben; Pratyush Buragohain; Haidong Lu; Alexei Gruverman; Arun Parthasarathy; Shaloo Rakheja; Christian Binek
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 14.919

4.  Characterization of Vegard strain related to exceptionally fast Cu-chemical diffusion in Cu[Formula: see text]Mo[Formula: see text]S[Formula: see text] by an advanced electrochemical strain microscopy method.

Authors:  Sebastian Badur; Diemo Renz; Marvin Cronau; Thomas Göddenhenrich; Dirk Dietzel; Bernhard Roling; André Schirmeisen
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-13       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Electrostatically-blind quantitative piezoresponse force microscopy free of distributed-force artifacts.

Authors:  Jason P Killgore; Larry Robins; Liam Collins
Journal:  Nanoscale Adv       Date:  2022-03-15
  5 in total

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