Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/20611
Title: Interface and thickness dependent domain switching and stability in Mg doped lithium niobate
Author: Neumayer, Sabine M.
Ivanov, Ilia N.
Manzo, Michele
Kholkin, Andrei L.
Gallo, Katia
Rodriguez, Brian J.
Keywords: EXCHANGED WAVE-GUIDES
PIEZORESPONSE FORCE MICROSCOPY
LINBO3 CRYSTALS
RAMAN-SPECTROSCOPY
SPECTRA
FABRICATION
SCATTERING
INVERSION
PHONONS
PHASES
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: AMER INST PHYSICS
Abstract: Controlling ferroelectric switching in Mg doped lithium niobate (Mg: LN) is of fundamental importance for optical device and domain wall electronics applications that require precise domain patterns. Stable ferroelectric switching has been previously observed in undoped LN layers above proton exchanged (PE) phases that exhibit reduced polarization, whereas PE layers have been found to inhibit lateral domain growth. Here, Mg doping, which is known to significantly alter ferroelectric switching properties including coercive field and switching currents, is shown to inhibit domain nucleation and stability in Mg: LN above buried PE phases that allow for precise ferroelectric patterning via domain growth control. Furthermore, piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) and switching spectroscopy PFM reveal that the voltage at which polarization switches from the \"up\" to the \"down\" state increases with increasing thickness in pure Mg: LN, whereas the voltage required for stable back switching to the original \"up\" state does not exhibit this thickness dependence. This behavior is consistent with the presence of an internal frozen defect field. The inhibition of domain nucleation above PE interfaces, observed in this study, is a phenomenon that occurs in Mg: LN but not in undoped samples and is mainly ascribed to a remaining frozen polarization in the PE phase that opposes polarization reversal. This reduced frozen depolarization field in the PE phase also influences the depolarization field of the Mg: LN layer above due to the presence of uncompensated polarization charge at the PE-Mg: LN boundary. These alterations in internal electric fields within the sample cause long-range lattice distortions in Mg: LN via electromechanical coupling, which were corroborated with complimentary Raman measurements. (C) 2015 AIP Publishing LLC.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/20611
DOI: 10.1063/1.4936605
ISSN: 0021-8979
Publisher Version: 10.1063/1.4936605
Appears in Collections:CICECO - Artigos



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