Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2021; Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session R60: Advances in Scanned Probe Microscopy I
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Thursday, March 18, 2021
Sponsoring
Unit:
GIMS
Chair: Laurel Winter, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract: R60.00001 : Direct and converse flexoelectricity: the effect of strain and electric field gradients on nanoscale electromechanical responses
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Live
Presenter:
Neus Domingo
(Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology ICN2)
Author:
Neus Domingo
(Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology ICN2)
In this talk, I will review how gradient-based electro-mechanical effects couples and affects the quantification of PFM measurements. I will start by demonstrating the asymmetry in mechanical properties induced by the coupling of flexoelectricity to ferroelectricity leading to ferroelectrics as smart mechanical materials [2], and opening new opportunities to mechanically read ferroelectric polarization states in both, thin films and single crystals, on the base of Contact Resonance Frequency AFM mode. Then, I will put the light in another new aspect: I will demonstrate how converse flexoelectric effect [3] due to the presence of strong local electric field gradients at the tip end can induce a mechanical strain of the sample in dielectric centrosymmetric materials with magnitudes comparable to piezoelectric d33 coefficient.
References
[1] H. Lu, C.-W. Bark, D. Esque de los Ojos, J. Alcala, C. B. Eom, G. Catalan, A. Gruverman, Mechanical Writing of Ferroelectric polarization, Science 336 (2012) 59.
[2] K. Cordero-Edwards, N. Domingo, A. Abdollahi, J. Sort, G. Catalan, Ferroelectrics as Smart Mechanical Materials, Advanced Materials,29 (2017) 1702210.
[3] Abdollahi, A.; Domingo, N.; Arias, I.; Catalan, G., Converse flexoelectricity yields large piezoresponse force microscopy signals in non-piezoelectric materials. Nature Communications 10 (2019) 1266
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