Resetting Piezoresponse Force Microscopy: Towards a real quantitative technique
A. Gomez, H.T.T Nong, S. Mercone, T. Puig, X. Obradors

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the limitations of standard Piezoresponse Force Microscopy (PFM) for quantitative measurements and proposes a correction method called the Open Piezopotential Gauge to improve accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a new correction factor for PFM measurements that accounts for the variable force exerted by piezoelectric materials, enabling more accurate quantitative analysis.
Findings
PFM cannot be considered inherently quantitative without correction.
The proposed Open Piezopotential Gauge improves measurement accuracy.
Material stiffness limits the displacement in nanoscale PFM measurements.
Abstract
A nanometric needle sensor mounted in an Atomic Force Microscopy allows systematic picometer-range distance measurements. This force sensing device is used in Piezoresponse Force Microscopy (PFM) as a distance sensor, by employing the cantilever spring constant as the conversion factor opening a pathway to explore the piezoelectric effect at the nanoscale. The force-distance equivalence is achieved if the force sensor does not disturb the system to study, solely. In this manuscript we report a systematic study in which different Lead Zirconate Titanate (PZT) materials, having different d33 values, are measured following the standard theory available for PFM. Both in resonance and out of resonance measurements demonstrate that PFM cannot be considered quantitative. After performing the measurements, we propose a correction of the standard theory employed in PFM by considering the force…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Advanced MEMS and NEMS Technologies
