Characterizing ferroelectric materials with SS-PFM and DCUBE PFM

22 Jun 2023

Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) is a powerful technique for studying ferroelectric materials due to the high sensitivity and nanometer-level resolution that it inherits from atomic force microscopy (AFM). PFM-based spectroscopic methods, such as switching spectroscopy PFM (SS-PFM) and DataCube™ PFM (DCUBE PFM), allow the characterization of key parameters of ferroelectrics, such as coercive voltages, nucleation voltages, saturation responses, and more. Unfortunately, the quantification and interpretation of PFM results can be complicated by artifacts. In this application note from Bruker, learn more about the best modes and practices for optimizing PFM measurements to achieve reliable results.

Dimension Icon

Bruker Nano Surfaces and Metrology

Bruker’s Dimension Icon brings the highest levels of performance, functionality, and AFM accessibility to nanoscale researchers in science and industry. Building upon the world’s most utilized large-sample AFM platform, it is the culmination of decades of technological innovation, customer feedback, and industry-leading application flexibility. 

(0)

Links

Tags

Atomic Force Microscopy / Scanning Tunneling MicroscopyAtomic force microscopes (AFM) and scanning tunneling microscopes (STM) are high-resolution forms of scanning probe microscope (SPM) used to generate topological information of a sample down to the atomic scale. Instruments can generate an image of the surface topology, manipulate objects and reveal information on localized properties such as Young’s modulus, conductivity, and magnetism. High-quality STM and AFM probes optimized for your application are available, as well as other SPM-based instruments such as scanning ion conductance microscopes (SICM) & near-field scanning optical microscopes (NSOM). Find the best AFM and STM equipment in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.AFM
Characterizing ferroelectric materials with SS-PFM and DCUBE PFM