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Dive into the research topics where Rama K. Vasudevan is active.

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Featured researches published by Rama K. Vasudevan.


ACS Nano | 2011

Exploring Topological Defects in Epitaxial BiFeO3 Thin Films

Rama K. Vasudevan; Yi-Chun Chen; Hsiang-Hua Tai; Nina Balke; Pingping Wu; Saswata Bhattacharya; Long-Qing Chen; Ying-Hao Chu; I-Nan Lin; Sergei V. Kalinin; V. Nagarajan

Using a combination of piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) and phase-field modeling, we demonstrate ubiquitous formation of center-type and possible ferroelectric closure domain arrangements during polarization switching near the ferroelastic domain walls in (100) oriented rhombohedral BiFeO(3). The formation of these topological defects is determined from the vertical and lateral PFM data and confirmed from the reversible changes in surface topography. These observations provide insight into the mechanisms of tip-induced ferroelastic domain control and suggest that formation of topological defect states under the action of local defect- and tip-induced fields is much more common than previously believed.


Nano Letters | 2011

Nanoscale Control of Phase Variants in Strain-Engineered BiFeO3

Rama K. Vasudevan; Y. Y. Liu; Jiangyu Li; Wen I. Liang; Amit Kumar; Stephen Jesse; Yi-Chun Chen; Ying-Hao Chu; V. Nagarajan; Sergei V. Kalinin

Development of magnetoelectric, electromechanical, and photovoltaic devices based on mixed-phase rhombohedral-tetragonal (R-T) BiFeO(3) (BFO) systems is possible only if the control of the engineered R phase variants is realized. Accordingly, we explore the mechanism of a bias induced phase transformation in this system. Single point spectroscopy demonstrates that the T → R transition is activated at lower voltages compared to T → -T polarization switching. With phase field modeling, the transition is shown to be electrically driven. We further demonstrate that symmetry of formed R-phase rosettes can be broken by a proximal probe motion, allowing controlled creation of R variants with defined orientation. This approach opens a pathway to designing next-generation magnetoelectronic and data storage devices in the nanoscale.


Nano Letters | 2012

Domain Wall Geometry Controls Conduction in Ferroelectrics

Rama K. Vasudevan; Anna N. Morozovska; Eugene A. Eliseev; Jason Britson; Jan-Chi Yang; Ying-Hao Chu; Petro Maksymovych; Long-Qing Chen; V. Nagarajan; Sergei V. Kalinin

A new paradigm of domain wall nanoelectronics has emerged recently, in which the domain wall in a ferroic is itself an active device element. The ability to spatially modulate the ferroic order parameter within a single domain wall allows the physical properties to be tailored at will and hence opens vastly unexplored device possibilities. Here, we demonstrate via ambient and ultrahigh-vacuum (UHV) scanning probe microscopy (SPM) measurements in bismuth ferrite that the conductivity of the domain walls can be modulated by up to 500% in the spatial dimension as a function of domain wall curvature. Landau-Ginzburg-Devonshire calculations reveal the conduction is a result of carriers or vacancies migrating to neutralize the charge at the formed interface. Phase-field modeling indicates that anisotropic potential distributions can occur even for initially uncharged walls, from polarization dynamics mediated by elastic effects. These results are the first proof of concept for modulation of charge as a function of domain wall geometry by a proximal probe, thereby expanding potential applications for oxide ferroics in future nanoscale electronics.


Annual Review of Physical Chemistry | 2014

Band Excitation in Scanning Probe Microscopy: Recognition and Functional Imaging

Stephen Jesse; Rama K. Vasudevan; Liam Collins; Evgheni Strelcov; M. B. Okatan; Alex Belianinov; Arthur P. Baddorf; Roger Proksch; Sergei V. Kalinin

Field confinement at the junction between a biased scanning probe microscopes tip and solid surface enables local probing of various bias-induced transformations, such as polarization switching, ionic motion, and electrochemical reactions. The nanoscale size of the biased region, smaller or comparable to that of features such as grain boundaries and dislocations, potentially allows for the study of kinetics and thermodynamics at the level of a single defect. In contrast to classical statistically averaged approaches, this approach allows one to link structure to functionality and deterministically decipher associated mesoscopic and atomistic mechanisms. Furthermore, responses measured as a function of frequency and bias can serve as a fingerprint of local material functionality, allowing for local recognition imaging of inorganic and biological systems. This article reviews current progress in multidimensional scanning probe microscopy techniques based on band excitation time and voltage spectroscopies, including discussions on data acquisition, dimensionality reduction, and visualization, along with future challenges and opportunities for the field.


Nature Communications | 2015

Carrier density modulation in a germanium heterostructure by ferroelectric switching

Patrick Ponath; Kurt D. Fredrickson; Agham Posadas; Yuan Ren; Xiaoyu Wu; Rama K. Vasudevan; M. Baris Okatan; Stephen Jesse; Toshihiro Aoki; Martha R. McCartney; David J. Smith; Sergei V. Kalinin; Keji Lai; Alexander A. Demkov

The development of non-volatile logic through direct coupling of spontaneous ferroelectric polarization with semiconductor charge carriers is nontrivial, with many issues, including epitaxial ferroelectric growth, demonstration of ferroelectric switching and measurable semiconductor modulation. Here we report a true ferroelectric field effect-carrier density modulation in an underlying Ge(001) substrate by switching of the ferroelectric polarization in epitaxial c-axis-oriented BaTiO3 grown by molecular beam epitaxy. Using the density functional theory, we demonstrate that switching of BaTiO3 polarization results in a large electric potential change in Ge. Aberration-corrected electron microscopy confirms BaTiO3 tetragonality and the absence of any low-permittivity interlayer at the interface with Ge. The non-volatile, switchable nature of the single-domain out-of-plane ferroelectric polarization of BaTiO3 is confirmed using piezoelectric force microscopy. The effect of the polarization switching on the conductivity of the underlying Ge is measured using microwave impedance microscopy, clearly demonstrating a ferroelectric field effect.


Advanced Structural and Chemical Imaging | 2015

Big data and deep data in scanning and electron microscopies: deriving functionality from multidimensional data sets

Alex Belianinov; Rama K. Vasudevan; Evgheni Strelcov; Chad A. Steed; Sang Mo Yang; Alexander Tselev; Stephen Jesse; Michael D. Biegalski; Galen M. Shipman; Christopher T. Symons; Albina Y. Borisevich; Richard K Archibald; Sergei V. Kalinin

The development of electron and scanning probe microscopies in the second half of the twentieth century has produced spectacular images of the internal structure and composition of matter with nanometer, molecular, and atomic resolution. Largely, this progress was enabled by computer-assisted methods of microscope operation, data acquisition, and analysis. Advances in imaging technology in the beginning of the twenty-first century have opened the proverbial floodgates on the availability of high-veracity information on structure and functionality. From the hardware perspective, high-resolution imaging methods now routinely resolve atomic positions with approximately picometer precision, allowing for quantitative measurements of individual bond lengths and angles. Similarly, functional imaging often leads to multidimensional data sets containing partial or full information on properties of interest, acquired as a function of multiple parameters (time, temperature, or other external stimuli). Here, we review several recent applications of the big and deep data analysis methods to visualize, compress, and translate this multidimensional structural and functional data into physically and chemically relevant information.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Electrical Control of Multiferroic Orderings in Mixed-Phase BiFeO3 Films

Yi-Chun Chen; Qing He; Feng Nan Chu; Yen Chin Huang; Jhih Wei Chen; Wen I. Liang; Rama K. Vasudevan; V. Nagarajan; Elke Arenholz; Sergei V. Kalinin; Ying-Hao Chu

Recent advances in thin-fi lm engineering leads to a new type of mixed-phase system in BiFeO 3 (BFO) epitaxial fi lms driven by substrate strain. [ 1 ] Single-phase multiferroic BFO had attracted great interests due to its robust ferroelectric and antiferromagnetic orderings at room temperatures. [ 2–11 ] Under a strong compressive strain ( > 4%), the stable crystal structure of BFO transformed from the rhombohedral-like monoclinics (R) to tetragonal-like monoclinics (T), [ 12 , 13 ] and with suitable strain relaxation through thickness, the coexistence of R-BFO and T-BFO phases can be obtained in the same fi lm. [ 1 , 14–18 ]


Nature Materials | 2016

Highly mobile ferroelastic domain walls in compositionally graded ferroelectric thin films

Joshua C. Agar; Anoop R. Damodaran; M. B. Okatan; Josh Kacher; Christoph Gammer; Rama K. Vasudevan; Shishir Pandya; Liv R. Dedon; R. V. K. Mangalam; Gabriel A. Velarde; Stephen Jesse; Nina Balke; Andrew M. Minor; Sergei V. Kalinin; Lane W. Martin

Domains and domain walls are critical in determining the response of ferroelectrics, and the ability to controllably create, annihilate, or move domains is essential to enable a range of next-generation devices. Whereas electric-field control has been demonstrated for ferroelectric 180° domain walls, similar control of ferroelastic domains has not been achieved. Here, using controlled composition and strain gradients, we demonstrate deterministic control of ferroelastic domains that are rendered highly mobile in a controlled and reversible manner. Through a combination of thin-film growth, transmission-electron-microscopy-based nanobeam diffraction and nanoscale band-excitation switching spectroscopy, we show that strain gradients in compositionally graded PbZr1-xTixO3 heterostructures stabilize needle-like ferroelastic domains that terminate inside the film. These needle-like domains are highly labile in the out-of-plane direction under applied electric fields, producing a locally enhanced piezoresponse. This work demonstrates the efficacy of novel modes of epitaxy in providing new modalities of domain engineering and potential for as-yet-unrealized nanoscale functional devices.


Applied physics reviews | 2017

Ferroelectric or non-ferroelectric: Why so many materials exhibit “ferroelectricity” on the nanoscale

Rama K. Vasudevan; Nina Balke; Peter Maksymovych; Stephen Jesse; Sergei V. Kalinin

Ferroelectric materials have remained one of the major focal points of condensed matter physics and materials science for over 50 years. In the last 20 years, the development of voltage-modulated scanning probe microscopy techniques, exemplified by Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) and associated time- and voltage spectroscopies, opened a pathway to explore these materials on a single-digit nanometer level. Consequently, domain structures and walls and polarization dynamics can now be imaged in real space. More generally, PFM has allowed studying electromechanical coupling in a broad variety of materials ranging from ionics to biological systems. It can also be anticipated that the recent Nobel prize [“The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2016,” http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2016/ (Nobel Media, 2016)] in molecular electromechanical machines will result in rapid growth in interest in PFM as a method to probe their behavior on single device and device assembly levels. However, the br...


Nanoscale | 2012

Controlling magnetoelectric coupling by nanoscale phase transformation in strain engineered bismuth ferrite

Y. Y. Liu; Rama K. Vasudevan; K. Pan; Shuhong Xie; Wen-I Liang; Amit Kumar; Stephen Jesse; Yi-Chun Chen; Ying-Hao Chu; V. Nagarajan; Sergei V. Kalinin; Jiangyu Li

The magnetoelectric coupling in multiferroic materials is promising for a wide range of applications, yet manipulating magnetic ordering by electric field proves elusive to obtain and difficult to control. In this paper, we explore the prospect of controlling magnetic ordering in misfit strained bismuth ferrite (BiFeO(3), BFO) films, combining theoretical analysis, numerical simulations, and experimental characterizations. Electric field induced transformation from a tetragonal phase to a distorted rhombohedral one in strain engineered BFO films has been identified by thermodynamic analysis, and realized by scanning probe microscopy (SPM) experiment. By breaking the rotational symmetry of a tip-induced electric field as suggested by phase field simulation, the morphology of distorted rhombohedral variants has been delicately controlled and regulated. Such capabilities enable nanoscale control of magnetoelectric coupling in strain engineered BFO films that is difficult to achieve otherwise, as demonstrated by phase field simulations.

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Sergei V. Kalinin

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Stephen Jesse

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Alexander Tselev

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Arthur P. Baddorf

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Maxim Ziatdinov

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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V. Nagarajan

University of New South Wales

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Ye Cao

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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M. Baris Okatan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Nina Balke

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Long-Qing Chen

Pennsylvania State University

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