Title :
A decade of piezoresponse force microscopy: progress, challenges, and opportunities
Author :
Kalinin, Sergei V. ; Rar, Andrei ; Jesse, Stephen
Author_Institution :
Mater. Sci. & Technol. Div., Oak Ridge Nat. Lab., TN
fDate :
12/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Coupling between electrical and mechanical phenomena is a near-universal characteristic of inorganic and biological systems alike, with examples ranging from piezoelectricity in ferroelectric perovskites to complex, electromechanical couplings in electromotor proteins in cellular membranes. Understanding electromechanical functionality in materials such as ferroelectric nanocrystals and thin films, relaxor ferroelectrics, and biosystems requires probing these properties on the nanometer level of individual grain, domain, or protein fibril. In the last decade, piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) was established as a powerful tool for nanoscale imaging, spectroscopy, and manipulation of ferroelectric materials. Here, we present principles and recent advances in PFM, including vector and frequency-dependent imaging of piezoelectric materials, briefly review applications for ferroelectric materials, discuss prospects for electromechanical imaging of local crystallographic and molecular orientations and disorder, and summarize future challenges and opportunities for PFM emerging in the second decade since its invention
Keywords :
atomic force microscopy; crystallography; ferroelectric materials; molecular orientation; piezoelectric materials; piezoelectricity; biosystems; cellular membranes; crystallographic disorder; crystallographic orientation; electromechanical couplings; electromechanical functionality; electromechanical imaging; electromotor proteins; ferroelectric material manipulation; ferroelectric nanocrystals; ferroelectric perovskites; ferroelectric thin films; molecular disorder; molecular orientation; nanoscale imaging; nanoscale spectroscopy; piezoelectric materials; piezoelectricity; piezoresponse force microscopy; protein fibril; relaxor ferroelectrics; Biological materials; Biological systems; Biomembranes; Couplings; Ferroelectric materials; Microscopy; Nanobioscience; Nanocrystals; Piezoelectricity; Proteins;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2006.169