
Shimmering ferroelectric domains
Date: Sunday, July 20, 2008 @ 23:46:06 UTC Topic: Science
False color image of the electric domains on the surface of a
bariumtitanate crystal. Image (a) was measured with a wavelength of
17.2 micrometers, image (b) of 16.7 micrometers. The color red means a
strong signal. The change of the colors from red to blue is clearly
visible.
Ferroelectric materials are named after ferromagnetic ones because they
behave in a similar way. The main difference: these materials are not
magnetic, but permanently electrically polarized. They have great
importance for data storage technology and novel piezoelectric devices.
Dresden scientists were able to produce microscopic images of
ferroelectric domains - tiny regions of a ferroelectric material -,
where the electric polarization points into different directions. These
results were published in the journal Physical Review Letters recently.
Dr. Lukas M. Eng and his group
at the Technische Universität Dresden used the free-electron laser at
the Forschungszentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (FZD) to study ferroelectric
domains. Ferroelectric materials are special crystals like, e.g.
bariumtitanate, where the titanium atoms in the crystal lattice are
slightly shifted into one direction. This shift results in a
polarization and, therefore, in a permanent electric field.
The ferroelectric domains
differ only by the direction of the permanent electric field in the
material. The two possible types of domains show either an electric
field which is oriented parallel to the surface of the crystal or which
points perpendicular to the surface. By applying an external field
(e.g. electric voltage) one can reverse the polarity of the domains.
Because of these properties ferroelectric materials are widely used in
novel technological devices, such as in Ferroelectric Random Access
Memory (FRAM or FeRam).
The Dresden scientists aimed at getting as clear an image as
possible of the domains in order to understand better how they
function, and to specifically manipulate the electric charge of the
domains for future devices. The size of a bariumtitanate domain is
about one to ten micrometers. Optical methods are dependent on the
wavelength of the type of “light” which is applied. The free-electron
laser at the FZD emits powerful radiation in a wide range of the
infrared and THz region of the electromagnetic spectrum – a region
where not many other laser sources exist.
The scientists tuned the laser
to a frequency which was in resonance with the atomic motion in the
bariumtitanate (near 18 Terahertz). Then they shone the invisible laser
beam onto a sharp needle (the tip of an atomic force microscope),
moving across the sample surface. Finally they measured the light that
was scattered away from the needle. It turns out that this signal
contains microscopic information about the sample, in fact with a
resolution better than 200 nanometers, which is hundred times smaller
than the wavelength of the light.
The domains of the ferroelectric material shimmered in different
colors. This is due to the fact that the interaction of the infrared
light with the crystal via the tip is different for the two types of
domains. The technique itself is called near-field microscopy. The
researches were taking advantage of the fact that the two types of
domains have their individual resonance frequency. This is the
frequency at which the largest amount of infrared light is scattered.
In the experiment, areas that appear bright in the image (red in
false-color) at a wavelength of 16.7 micrometers, become dark (blue in
false color), if the wavelength is tuned to 17.2 micrometers, and vice
versa.
The results show the huge potential the free-electron laser has
when used for near-field microscopy. The large power and tunability are
indispensable for this type of investigations. The group is presently
extending its activities thanks to funding by the German Science
Foundation (DFG). The scientists of TU Dresden and FZD envision
applications for other novel material systems like the so-called
multi-ferroics, but also for biomolecules or semiconductor
nanostructures (e.g. for wafer inspection).
Citation: S.C. Kehr, M. Cebula, O. Mieth, T. Härtling, J Seidel, S.
Grafström, L.M. Eng, S. Winnerl, D. Stehr, M. Helm: „Anisotropy
contrast in phonon-enhanced apertureless near-field microscopy using a
free-electron laser“, in Physical Review Letters, 100, 256403 (2008), doi:10.1103.
Source: Forschungszentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (FZD) Via: http://www.physorg.com/news135581121.html
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