Scientists with the University of Chicago have made significant strides in imaging antiferroelectric materials, a class of materials with unique electrical properties that could open up potential applications in energy storage, sensors, and memory devices.
It is crucial to understand the electronic properties of materials to advance cutting-edge technologies. However, researchers have faced challenges in imaging certain kinds of materials and in turn, discovering their true properties and potential.
“We demonstrated a new method for emerging antiferroelectric materials on the nanoscale,” said Sarah King, Asst. Prof. of Chemistry and senior author on the study. “I believe that having new imaging techniques with such high spatial resolution is incredibly powerful. It's going to play a critical role in the development of new materials.”
The study was published June 14th in Science Advances.
Taking a better picture
King’s lab uses electron microscopy to study materials to find out how they work and then customize them for various uses. In this case, her team examined materials that have a special ability known as antiferroelectricity.
Antiferroelectric materials are extremely valuable because of their special arrangement of electric dipoles – arrangements of partial positive and negative charges – which perfectly cancel each other out, resulting in no net positive or negative polarization in the material. Usually there are different ways the electric dipoles can order themselves, and they form what are known as “domains” with different alignments depending on how the material’s atoms are arranged.
Crucially, applying an electric field to an antiferroelectric material allows you to switch it to a higher energy state where the electric dipoles don’t cancel each other out. This switching behavior makes them particularly fascinating to scientists and engineers looking to unlock their potential, especially for electronics and energy storage.
However, developing these materials has presented challenges, especially when it comes to imaging and characterizing them for modification. Traditional imaging techniques often lack the necessary resolution and contrast to effectively study these materials and their dynamics.
"One of the major hurdles is that we don't have a great way of determining whether something is antiferroelectric because we lack the means to visualize the domains," explained King.
Determined to see their goals clearly, her lab has now pioneered a fresh approach that enables researchers to finally see their domains.
Finding the map
Building on an advanced microscopy technique called polarization-dependent photoemission electron microscopy, the group was able to image in detail the electronic properties and arrangement of domains in a commonly used antiferroelectric material known as indium selenide.