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American Institute of Physics, Applied Physics Letters, 4(83), p. 728

DOI: 10.1063/1.1593830

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Mechanical Stress Effect on Imprint Behavior of Integrated Ferroelectric Capacitors

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Stress-induced changes in the imprint and switching behavior of (111)-oriented Pb(Zr,Ti)O-3 (PZT)-based capacitors have been studied using piezoresponse force microscopy. Visualization of polarization distribution and d(33)-loop measurements in individual 1x1.5-mum(2) capacitors before and after stress application, generated by substrate bending, provided direct experimental evidence of stress-induced switching. Mechanical stress caused elastic switching in capacitors with the direction of the resulting polarization determined by the sign of the applied stress. In addition, stress application turned capacitors into a heavily imprinted state characterized by strongly shifted hysteresis loops and almost complete backswitching after application of the poling voltage. It is suggested that substrate bending generated a strain gradient in the PZT layer, which produced asymmetric lattice distortion with preferential polarization direction and triggered polarization switching due to the flexoelectric effect. (C) 2003 American Institute of Physics.