Researchers visualise oxygen movement in ferroelectricity materials : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Researchers visualise oxygen movement in ferroelectricity materials

They imaged thin films of hafnium-zirconium oxide sandwiched between two electrodes

Researchers visualise oxygen movement in ferroelectricity materials

Photo for representation only. Source: iStock.



Bengaluru, April 16

A new study by an international team of researchers, including those from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), has unveiled how an unusual form of ferroelectricity arises in certain nano-sized materials.

The team included Pavan Nukala, Assistant Professor at the Centre for Nano Science and Engineering (CeNSE), IISc, and former Marie Curie Research Fellow at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands  where a large part of the work was carried out  as well as Tuhin Chakrabortty, PhD student at CeNSE.

Using state-of-the-art atomic resolution microscopy, they showed experimentally for the first time that when an electric field is applied, ferroelectricity arises in materials called hafnia-based oxides due to the displacement and reversible movement of negatively charged oxygen atoms, Bengaluru-based IISc said in a statement.

Such materials are useful for low-power memory applications, according to Nukala, who is one of the corresponding authors of the study published in 'Science'.

"Hafnia-based ferroelectric memory devices are already in production, even though the mechanism behind their behaviour was not known," he says.

Like magnets, ferroelectric materials show spontaneous polarisation  the separation of positive and negative charges  which can be reversed or switched using an electric field.

However, they are generally unsuitable for miniaturisation because they lose their ferroelectric properties when the crystal is made smaller than a particular size, it was noted.

But in 2011, scientists showed that hafnia-based oxides could exhibit ferroelectricity even when they are nano-sized, and that this ferroelectricity in fact grows stronger as the material size gets smaller, opening up numerous opportunities for microelectronics.

However, there was no clear understanding of how ferroelectricity happens in these nano-sized materials.

Some scientists have proposed compelling theories about why and how these materials switch, but they have not been experimentally proven so far, according to the statement.

  Nukala and colleagues used an advanced electron microscopy technique that had recently been developed and earlier used by a research team at the University of Groningen to visualise a hydrogen atom, the lightest chemical element.

In the new study, they imaged thin films of hafnium-zirconium oxide sandwiched between two electrodes.

They were also able to track the movement of atoms, including oxygen, in real time when an electric field was applied.

  The researchers found that charged oxygen atoms move from one electrode to another with the hafnia layer acting as a conduit. When the electric field was reversed, the direction of migration was also reversed.

It was this migration that contributed significantly to the materials ferroelectricity, they found.

When the conduit size was reduced (as the device is made smaller), oxygen conduction became more robust. These findings were also confirmed by X-ray diffraction studies carried out in Sweden.

  Oxygen migration occurs due to imperfections or "vacancies" in the crystal structure, explains Nukala.

"These structural defects are the key to the ferroelectric behaviour, and in general give novel functions to materials."

Directly imaging the dynamics of light elements using electron microscopy has not been attempted until recently.

Among the many challenges was fabricating electron microscope-compatible capacitors made of hafnia.

  The task of designing these samples was successfully led by Nukala, who believes that the protocols they have developed could help researchers perform similar experiments on other materials.

  Another challenge was accurate statistical analysis of the microscopy data.

  Nukala's student Chakrabortty, who has been working on statistical inference in biological systems, used image processing tools to establish that the reversible oxygen migration is indeed statistically significant.

  "The insights offered by the study open up new avenues for designing oxygen-conducting ferroelectric materials that could be used for miniature memory and logic devices," the statement said. — PTI


Top News

Lok Sabha election 2024: Voting under way in 88 constituencies; Rahul Gandhi, Hema Malini in fray

Lok Sabha election 2024: Over 60 per cent polling recorded till 5 pm in 88 constituencies across 13 states Lok Sabha election 2024: Over 60 per cent polling recorded till 5 pm in 88 constituencies across 13 states

Voters in some villages of Uttar Pradesh's Mathura, Rajastha...

Supreme Court to deliver verdict on PILs seeking 100 per cent cross-verification of EVM votes with VVPAT today

Supreme Court dismisses PILs seeking 100% cross-verification of EVM votes with VVPAT slips

Bench however, issues certain directions to Election Commiss...

Amritpal Singh to contest Lok Sabha poll from Punjab’s Khadoor Sahib, confirms mother

Amritpal Singh to contest Lok Sabha poll from Punjab’s Khadoor Sahib, confirms mother

The formal announcement is made by his mother Balwinder Kaur...

Arvind Kejriwal as CM even after arrest puts political interest over national interest: Delhi High Court

Arvind Kejriwal as CM even after arrest puts political interest over national interest: Delhi High Court

The court says the Delhi government is ‘interested in approp...

Will stop functioning in India if made to break encryption of messages: WhatsApp to Delhi High Court

Will stop functioning in India if made to break encryption of messages: WhatsApp to Delhi High Court

Facebook and Whatsapp have recently challenged the new rules...


Cities

View All