The utility of ferroelectric materials stems from the ability to nucleate and move polarized domains using an electric field. To understand the mechanisms of polarization switching, structural characterization at the nanoscale is required. We used aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy to follow the kinetics and dynamics of ferroelectric switching at millisecond temporal and subangstrom spatial resolution in an epitaxial bilayer of an antiferromagnetic ferroelectric (BiFeO3) on a ferromagnetic electrode (La0.7Sr0.3MnO3). We observed localized nucleation events at the electrode interface, domain wall pinning on point defects, and the formation of ferroelectric domains localized to the ferroelectric and ferromagnetic interface....
Ferroelectric materials possess a spontaneous polarization that is switchable by an electric field. ...
Ferroelectric materials possess a spontaneous polarization that is switchable by an electric field. ...
Ferroelectric materials contain domains of ordered electric dipoles, separated by domain walls, that...
The utility of ferroelectric materials stems from the ability to nucleate and move polarized domains...
BiFeO 3 (BFO) is one of the most widely studied magneto-electric multiferroics. The magneto-electric...
Ferroelectric materials are characterized by a spontaneous polarization, which can be reoriented wit...
In this thesis, in situ biasing experiments on BiFeO3 thin film devices were enabled through the dev...
MasterThe ferroelectric domain switching is widely investigated as an enabling phenomenon of non-vol...
In situ Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques can potentially fill in gaps in the curren...
In situ Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques can potentially fill in gaps in the curren...
In situ Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques can potentially fill in gaps in the curren...
Ferroelectric polarization switching in epitaxial (110) BiFeO3 films is studied using piezoresponse ...
Ferroelectric polarization switching in epitaxial (110) BiFeO3 films is studied using piezoresponse ...
We use in situ transmission electron microscopy to directly observe, at high temporal and spatial re...
We use in situ transmission electron microscopy to directly observe, at high temporal and spatial re...
Ferroelectric materials possess a spontaneous polarization that is switchable by an electric field. ...
Ferroelectric materials possess a spontaneous polarization that is switchable by an electric field. ...
Ferroelectric materials contain domains of ordered electric dipoles, separated by domain walls, that...
The utility of ferroelectric materials stems from the ability to nucleate and move polarized domains...
BiFeO 3 (BFO) is one of the most widely studied magneto-electric multiferroics. The magneto-electric...
Ferroelectric materials are characterized by a spontaneous polarization, which can be reoriented wit...
In this thesis, in situ biasing experiments on BiFeO3 thin film devices were enabled through the dev...
MasterThe ferroelectric domain switching is widely investigated as an enabling phenomenon of non-vol...
In situ Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques can potentially fill in gaps in the curren...
In situ Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques can potentially fill in gaps in the curren...
In situ Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques can potentially fill in gaps in the curren...
Ferroelectric polarization switching in epitaxial (110) BiFeO3 films is studied using piezoresponse ...
Ferroelectric polarization switching in epitaxial (110) BiFeO3 films is studied using piezoresponse ...
We use in situ transmission electron microscopy to directly observe, at high temporal and spatial re...
We use in situ transmission electron microscopy to directly observe, at high temporal and spatial re...
Ferroelectric materials possess a spontaneous polarization that is switchable by an electric field. ...
Ferroelectric materials possess a spontaneous polarization that is switchable by an electric field. ...
Ferroelectric materials contain domains of ordered electric dipoles, separated by domain walls, that...