Piezoresponse phase as variable in electromechanical characterization
Sabine M. Neumayer, Sahar Saremi, Lane W. Martin, Liam Collins,, Alexander Tselev, Stephen Jesse, Sergei V. Kalinin, Nina Balke

TL;DR
This paper addresses the challenge of interpreting PFM phase data by identifying phase offsets and developing strategies to extract meaningful physical information about ferroelectric materials.
Contribution
It introduces a method to determine phase offsets in PFM measurements, improving the accuracy of polarization and electrostrictive coefficient analysis.
Findings
Correct phase offset extraction improves interpretation of PFM data
The method is verified on materials with positive and negative piezoelectric coefficients
Misinterpretation of phase can lead to inaccurate material characterization
Abstract
Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) is a powerful characterization technique to readily image and manipulate ferroelectrics domains. PFM gives insight into the strength of local piezoelectric coupling as well as polarization direction through PFM amplitude and phase, respectively. Converting measured arbitrary units to physical material parameters, however, remains a challenge. While much effort has been spent on quantifying the PFM amplitude signal, little attention has been given to the PFM phase and it is often arbitrarily adjusted to fit expectations or processed as recorded. This is problematic when investigating materials with unknown or potentially negative sign of the probed effective electrostrictive coefficient or strong frequency dispersion of electromechanical responses since assumptions about the phase cannot be reliably made. The PFM phase can, however, provide important…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFerroelectric and Piezoelectric Materials · Smart Materials for Construction · Acoustic Wave Resonator Technologies
