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Dive into the research topics where Shishir Pandya is active.

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Featured researches published by Shishir Pandya.


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.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2016

New modalities of strain-control of ferroelectric thin films.

Anoop R. Damodaran; Joshua C. Agar; Shishir Pandya; Zuhuang Chen; Liv R. Dedon; Ruijuan Xu; Brent A. Apgar; Sahar Saremi; Lane W. Martin

Ferroelectrics, with their spontaneous switchable electric polarization and strong coupling between their electrical, mechanical, thermal, and optical responses, provide functionalities crucial for a diverse range of applications. Over the past decade, there has been significant progress in epitaxial strain engineering of oxide ferroelectric thin films to control and enhance the nature of ferroelectric order, alter ferroelectric susceptibilities, and to create new modes of response which can be harnessed for various applications. This review aims to cover some of the most important discoveries in strain engineering over the past decade and highlight some of the new and emerging approaches for strain control of ferroelectrics. We discuss how these new approaches to strain engineering provide promising routes to control and decouple ferroelectric susceptibilities and create new modes of response not possible in the confines of conventional strain engineering. To conclude, we will provide an overview and prospectus of these new and interesting modalities of strain engineering helping to accelerate their widespread development and implementation in future functional devices.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Single gate p-n junctions in graphene-ferroelectric devices

J. Henry Hinnefeld; Ruijuan Xu; Steven P. Rogers; Shishir Pandya; Moonsub Shim; Lane W. Martin; Nadya Mason

Graphenes linear dispersion relation and the attendant implications for bipolar electronics applications have motivated a range of experimental efforts aimed at producing p-n junctions in graphene. Here we report electrical transport measurements of graphene p-n junctions formed via simple modifications to a PbZr0.2Ti0.8O3 substrate, combined with a self-assembled layer of ambient environmental dopants. We show that the substrate configuration controls the local doping region, and that the p-n junction behavior can be controlled with a single gate. Finally, we show that the ferroelectric substrate induces a hysteresis in the environmental doping which can be utilized to activate and deactivate the doping, yielding an “on-demand” p-n junction in graphene controlled by a single, universal backgate.


ACS Nano | 2015

Complex Evolution of Built-in Potential in Compositionally-Graded PbZr1- xTixO3 Thin Films

Joshua C. Agar; Anoop R. Damodaran; Gabriel A. Velarde; Shishir Pandya; R. V. K. Mangalam; Lane W. Martin

Epitaxial strain has been widely used to tune crystal and domain structures in ferroelectric thin films. New avenues of strain engineering based on varying the composition at the nanometer scale have been shown to generate symmetry breaking and large strain gradients culminating in large built-in potentials. In this work, we develop routes to deterministically control these built-in potentials by exploiting the interplay between strain gradients, strain accommodation, and domain formation in compositionally graded PbZr1-xTixO3 heterostructures. We demonstrate that variations in the nature of the compositional gradient and heterostructure thickness can be used to control both the crystal and domain structures and give rise to nonintuitive evolution of the built-in potential, which does not scale directly with the magnitude of the strain gradient as would be expected. Instead, large built-in potentials are observed in compositionally-graded heterostructures that contain (1) compositional gradients that traverse chemistries associated with structural phase boundaries (such as the morphotropic phase boundary) and (2) ferroelastic domain structures. In turn, the built-in potential is observed to be dependent on a combination of flexoelectric effects (i.e., polarization-strain gradient coupling), chemical-gradient effects (i.e., polarization-chemical potential gradient coupling), and local inhomogeneities (in structure or chemistry) that enhance strain (and/or chemical potential) gradients such as areas with nonlinear lattice parameter variation with chemistry or near ferroelastic domain boundaries. Regardless of origin, large built-in potentials act to suppress the dielectric permittivity, while having minimal impact on the magnitude of the polarization, which is important for the optimization of these materials for a range of nanoapplications from vibrational energy harvesting to thermal energy conversion and beyond.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Strain-induced growth instability and nanoscale surface patterning in perovskite thin films

Shishir Pandya; Anoop R. Damodaran; Ruijuan Xu; Shang-Lin Hsu; Joshua C. Agar; Lane W. Martin

Despite extensive studies on the effects of epitaxial strain on the evolution of the lattice and properties of materials, considerably less work has explored the impact of strain on growth dynamics. In this work, we demonstrate a growth-mode transition from 2D-step flow to self-organized, nanoscale 3D-island formation in PbZr0.2Ti0.8O3/SrRuO3/SrTiO3 (001) heterostructures as the kinetics of the growth process respond to the evolution of strain. With increasing heterostructure thickness and misfit dislocation formation at the buried interface, a periodic, modulated strain field is generated that alters the adatom binding energy and, in turn, leads to a kinetic instability that drives a transition from 2D growth to ordered, 3D-island formation. The results suggest that the periodically varying binding energy can lead to inhomogeneous adsorption kinetics causing preferential growth at certain sites. This, in conjunction with the presence of an Ehrlich-Schwoebel barrier, gives rise to long-range, periodically-ordered arrays of so-called “wedding cake” 3D nanostructures which self-assemble along the [100] and [010].


Advanced Materials | 2017

Three-State Ferroelastic Switching and Large Electromechanical Responses in PbTiO3 Thin Films

Anoop R. Damodaran; Shishir Pandya; Josh C. Agar; Ye Cao; Rama K. Vasudevan; Ruijuan Xu; Sahar Saremi; Qian Li; Jieun Kim; Margaret R. McCarter; Liv R. Dedon; Tom Angsten; Nina Balke; Stephen Jesse; Mark Asta; Sergei V. Kalinin; Lane W. Martin

Leveraging competition between energetically degenerate states to achieve large field-driven responses is a hallmark of functional materials, but routes to such competition are limited. Here, a new route to such effects involving domain-structure competition is demonstrated, which arises from strain-induced spontaneous partitioning of PbTiO3 thin films into nearly energetically degenerate, hierarchical domain architectures of coexisting c/a and a1 /a2 domain structures. Using band-excitation piezoresponse force microscopy, this study manipulates and acoustically detects a facile interconversion of different ferroelastic variants via a two-step, three-state ferroelastic switching process (out-of-plane polarized c+ → in-plane polarized a → out-of-plane polarized c- state), which is concomitant with large nonvolatile electromechanical strains (≈1.25%) and tunability of the local piezoresponse and elastic modulus (>23%). It is further demonstrated that deterministic, nonvolatile writing/erasure of large-area patterns of this electromechanical response is possible, thus showing a new pathway to improved function and properties.


Nature Communications | 2017

Large polarization gradients and temperature-stable responses in compositionally-graded ferroelectrics

Anoop R. Damodaran; Shishir Pandya; Yubo Qi; Shang-Lin Hsu; Shi Liu; Christopher P. Nelson; Arvind Dasgupta; Peter Ercius; Colin Ophus; Liv R. Dedon; Josh C. Agar; Hongling Lu; Jialan Zhang; Andrew M. Minor; Andrew M. Rappe; Lane W. Martin

A range of modern applications require large and tunable dielectric, piezoelectric or pyroelectric response of ferroelectrics. Such effects are intimately connected to the nature of polarization and how it responds to externally applied stimuli. Ferroelectric susceptibilities are, in general, strongly temperature dependent, diminishing rapidly as one transitions away from the ferroelectric phase transition (TC). In turn, researchers seek new routes to manipulate polarization to simultaneously enhance susceptibilities and broaden operational temperature ranges. Here, we demonstrate such a capability by creating composition and strain gradients in Ba1−xSrxTiO3 films which result in spatial polarization gradients as large as 35 μC cm−2 across a 150 nm thick film. These polarization gradients allow for large dielectric permittivity with low loss (ɛr≈775, tan δ<0.05), negligible temperature-dependence (13% deviation over 500 °C) and high-dielectric tunability (greater than 70% across a 300 °C range). The role of space charges in stabilizing polarization gradients is also discussed.


Nature Materials | 2018

Pyroelectric energy conversion with large energy and power density in relaxor ferroelectric thin films

Shishir Pandya; Joshua Wilbur; Jieun Kim; Ran Gao; Arvind Dasgupta; Chris Dames; Lane W. Martin

The need for efficient energy utilization is driving research into ways to harvest ubiquitous waste heat. Here, we explore pyroelectric energy conversion from low-grade thermal sources that exploits strong field- and temperature-induced polarization susceptibilities in the relaxor ferroelectric 0.68Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3–0.32PbTiO3. Electric-field-driven enhancement of the pyroelectric response (as large as −550 μC m−2 K−1) and suppression of the dielectric response (by 72%) yield substantial figures of merit for pyroelectric energy conversion. Field- and temperature-dependent pyroelectric measurements highlight the role of polarization rotation and field-induced polarization in mediating these effects. Solid-state, thin-film devices that convert low-grade heat into electrical energy are demonstrated using pyroelectric Ericsson cycles, and optimized to yield maximum energy density, power density and efficiency of 1.06 J cm−3, 526 W cm−3 and 19% of Carnot, respectively; the highest values reported to date and equivalent to the performance of a thermoelectric with an effective ZT ≈ 1.16 for a temperature change of 10 K. Our findings suggest that pyroelectric devices may be competitive with thermoelectric devices for low-grade thermal harvesting.Pyroelectric energy conversion in a thin-film relaxor ferroelectric is studied under an electric field, resulting in high energy and power densities. Performance is equivalent to a ZT = 1.16 thermoelectric, competitive for low-grade thermal harvesting.


Science | 2017

Epitaxy on polycrystalline substrates

Shishir Pandya; Lane W. Martin

The growth of new oxide phases is explored with multiple surface orientations Motivated by combinatorial and high-throughput approaches to the discovery of antibodies and drugs in pharmaceutical research, efforts like the Materials Genome Initiative (1) have been envisioned to develop similar algorithms for the discovery, design, and realization of next-generation materials, such as superconducting (2), magnetoresistive (3), dielectric (4), and luminescent (5) materials. However, such experimental approaches have not become pervasive across all classes of materials. For example, in the study of thin-film, functional complex oxides, systematic, small-scale exploration has remained the standard. However, studies like that of Wittkamper et al. (6), which explore many different substrates by using a polycrystalline substrate, stand poised to open the door for high-throughput studies of complex materials.


Nature | 2018

Resonant domain-wall-enhanced tunable microwave ferroelectrics

Zongquan Gu; Shishir Pandya; Atanu Samanta; Shi Liu; Geoffrey Xiao; Cedric J. G. Meyers; Anoop R. Damodaran; Haim Barak; Arvind Dasgupta; Sahar Saremi; A. Polemi; Liyan Wu; Adrian Podpirka; Alexandria Will-Cole; Christopher J. Hawley; Peter K. Davies; Robert A. York; Ilya Grinberg; Lane W. Martin; Jonathan E. Spanier

Ordering of ferroelectric polarization1 and its trajectory in response to an electric field2 are essential for the operation of non-volatile memories3, transducers4 and electro-optic devices5. However, for voltage control of capacitance and frequency agility in telecommunication devices, domain walls have long been thought to be a hindrance because they lead to high dielectric loss and hysteresis in the device response to an applied electric field6. To avoid these effects, tunable dielectrics are often operated under piezoelectric resonance conditions, relying on operation well above the ferroelectric Curie temperature7, where tunability is compromised. Therefore, there is an unavoidable trade-off between the requirements of high tunability and low loss in tunable dielectric devices, which leads to severe limitations on their figure of merit. Here we show that domain structure can in fact be exploited to obtain ultralow loss and exceptional frequency selectivity without piezoelectric resonance. We use intrinsically tunable materials with properties that are defined not only by their chemical composition, but also by the proximity and accessibility of thermodynamically predicted strain-induced, ferroelectric domain-wall variants8. The resulting gigahertz microwave tunability and dielectric loss are better than those of the best film devices by one to two orders of magnitude and comparable to those of bulk single crystals. The measured quality factors exceed the theoretically predicted zero-field intrinsic limit owing to domain-wall fluctuations, rather than field-induced piezoelectric oscillations, which are usually associated with resonance. Resonant frequency tuning across the entire L, S and C microwave bands (1–8 gigahertz) is achieved in an individual device—a range about 100 times larger than that of the best intrinsically tunable material. These results point to a rich phase space of possible nanometre-scale domain structures that can be used to surmount current limitations, and demonstrate a promising strategy for obtaining ultrahigh frequency agility and low-loss microwave devices.The domain-wall structure and dynamics are found to enhance, rather than inhibit, the high-frequency performance of an intrinsically tunable material, obtaining ultralow loss and exceptional frequency selectivity.

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Lane W. Martin

University of California

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Joshua C. Agar

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Ruijuan Xu

University of California

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Liv R. Dedon

University of California

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Sahar Saremi

University of California

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Nina Balke

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Rama K. Vasudevan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Sergei V. Kalinin

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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