Exploring Charged Defects in Ferroelectrics by the Switching Spectroscopy Piezoresponse Force Microscopy

  • Denis Alikin
  • , Alexander Abramov
  • , Anton Turygin
  • , Anton Ievlev
  • , Victoria Pryakhina
  • , Dmitry Karpinsky
  • , Qingyuan Hu
  • , Li Jin
  • , Vladimir Shur
  • , Alexander Tselev
  • , Andrei Kholkin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Monitoring the charged defect concentration at the nanoscale is of critical importance for both the fundamental science and applications of ferroelectrics. However, up-to-date, high-resolution study methods for the investigation of structural defects, such as transmission electron microscopy, X-ray tomography, etc., are expensive and demand complicated sample preparation. With an example of the lanthanum-doped bismuth ferrite ceramics, a novel method is proposed based on the switching spectroscopy piezoresponse force microscopy (SSPFM) that allows probing the electric potential from buried subsurface charged defects in the ferroelectric materials with a nanometer-scale spatial resolution. When compared with the composition-sensitive methods, such as neutron diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and local time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, the SSPFM sensitivity to the variation of the electric potential from the charged defects is shown to be equivalent to less than 0.3 at% of the defect concentration. Additionally, the possibility to locally evaluate dynamics of the polarization screening caused by the charged defects is demonstrated, which is of significant interest for further understanding defect-mediated processes in ferroelectrics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2101289
JournalSmall Methods
Volume6
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Feb 2022

Keywords

  • bias field
  • domain walls, hysteresis loops, polarization reversal
  • screening
  • vacancies

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