Mechanical Properties of Nanomaterials Can Be Altered Due to Electric Field

TeYu Chien, a UW assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, uses a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope in his lab to observe nanomaterials. Chien is the lead author of a paper that appears in the journal Scientific Reports. His research determined that the electric field is responsible for the alteration of the fracture toughness of nanomaterials, which are used in state-of-the-art electronic devices. (UW Photo)
TeYu Chien, a UW assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, uses a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope in his lab to observe nanomaterials. Chien is the lead author of a paper that appears in the journal Scientific Reports. His research determined that the electric field is responsible for the alteration of the fracture toughness of nanomaterials, which are used in state-of-the-art electronic devices. (UW Photo)
Mechanical properties of nanomaterials can be altered due to the application of voltage, University of Wyoming researchers have discovered.

The researchers, led by TeYu Chien, a UW assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, determined that the electric field is responsible for altering the fracture toughness of nanomaterials, which are used in state-of-the-art electronic devices. It is the first observed evidence that the electric field changes the fracture toughness at a nanometer scale.

This finding opens the way for further investigation of nanomaterials regarding electric field-mechanical property interactions, which is extremely important for applications and fundamental research.

Chien is the lead author of a paper, titled “Built-in Electric Field Induced Mechanical Property Change at the Lanthanum Nickelate/Nb-doped Strontium Titanate Interfaces,” that was recently published in Scientific Reports. Scientific Reports is an online, open-access journal from the publishers of Nature. The journal publishes scientifically valid primary research from all areas of the natural and clinical sciences.

Other researchers who contributed to the paper are from the University of Arkansas, University of Tennessee and Argonne National Laboratory in Argonne, Ill.

Chien and his research team studied the surfaces of the fractured interfaces of ceramic materials, including lanthanum nickelate and strontium titanate with a small amount of niobium. The researchers revealed that strontium titanate, within a few nanometers of the interfaces, fractured differently from the strontium titanate away from the interfaces.

The two ceramic materials were chosen because one is a metallic oxide while the other is a semiconductor. When the two types of materials come into contact with each other, an intrinsic electric field will automatically be formed in a region, known as the Schottky barrier, near the interface, Chien explains. The Schottky barrier refers to the region where an intrinsic electric field is formed at metal/semiconductor interfaces.

The intrinsic electric field at interfaces is an inevitable phenomenon whenever one material is in contact with another. The electric field effects on the mechanical properties of materials are rarely studied, especially for nanomaterials. Understanding electric field effects is extremely important for applications of nanoelectromechanical system (NEMS), which are devices, such as actuators, integrating electrical and mechanical functionalities on the nanoscale.

For NEMS materials made in nanoscale, understanding the mechanical properties affected by electric fields is crucial for full control of device performance. The observations in this study pave the way to better understand the mechanical properties of nanomaterials.

“The electric field changes the inter-atomic bond length in the crystal by pushing positively and negatively charged ions in opposite directions,” Chien says. “Altering bond length changes bond strength. Hence, the mechanical properties, such as fracture toughness.”

“The whole picture is this: The intrinsic electric field in the Schottky barrier was created at the interfaces. This then polarized the materials near the interfaces by changing the atomic positions in the crystal. The changed atomic positions altered the inter-atomic bond length inside the materials to change the mechanical properties near the interfaces,” Chien summarizes.

Read more: Mechanical Properties of Nanomaterials Are Altered Due to Electric Field, UW Researchers Find

 

See Also

 

The Latest on: Mechanical properties of nanomaterials

[google_news title=”” keyword=”mechanical properties of nanomaterials” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

via Google News

 

The Latest on: Mechanical properties of nanomaterials
  • Global Carbon Nanomaterials Markets Report 2024-2033 with Profiles of 590+ Leading Producers/Suppliers
    on May 9, 2024 at 3:20 am

    The "The Global Market for Carbon Nanomaterials 2024-2033" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The Global Market for Carbon Nanomaterials 2024-2033 provides a comprehensive ...

  • New high-throughput device to unlock the potential of advanced materials
    on May 6, 2024 at 12:33 pm

    A Birmingham researcher has developed a new high-throughput device that produces libraries of nanomaterials using sustainable mechanochemical approaches.

  • Nanomechanics: Exploring the Mechanical Behavior of Materials at the Nanoscale
    on April 9, 2024 at 3:23 am

    Size effects refer to the observed changes in mechanical properties as the dimensions of a material are reduced to the nanoscale. For example, many nanomaterials exhibit enhanced strength and hardness ...

  • Elusive 3D printed nanoparticles could lead to new shapeshifting materials
    on March 25, 2024 at 6:48 am

    In nanomaterials, shape is destiny. That is, the geometry of the particle in the material defines the physical characteristics of the resulting material.

  • Spontaneous curvature the key to shape-shifting nanomaterials, finds study
    on March 4, 2024 at 7:31 am

    These could include materials that selectively reflect light, conduct electricity in novel ways, or have unique mechanical properties. The implications of this research are considerable.

  • Course Descriptions
    on November 15, 2023 at 9:55 pm

    Properties of nanomaterials and devices ... (4 units) Laboratory work spans the disciplines of mechanical engineering: dynamics, controls, fluids, heat transfer, and thermodynamics, with emphasis on ...

  • What are Nanomaterials?
    on August 31, 2023 at 12:33 am

    This unique structure endows them with distinct mechanical, electrical, and thermal properties. Two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials are characterized by having two dimensions beyond the nanoscale.

  • MS in Nanomaterials
    on December 9, 2022 at 1:56 am

    A graduate program in nanomaterials investigates materials with structure at the nanoscale, looking at the unique optical, electronic, or mechanical properties, which make them exceptionally ...

  • 8.4: Physical Properties of Nanomaterials
    on June 25, 2022 at 6:44 pm

    Mechanical properties of nanomaterials may reach the theoretical strength, which are one or two orders of magnitude higher than that of single crystals in the bulk form. The enhancement in mechanical ...

  • Nanomaterials Information
    on January 19, 2022 at 10:07 am

    mechanical, and optical properties of materials that naturally occur at that scale. Nanomaterials fall under the field of nanotechnology and the events that occur at the nanoscale level are based on ...

via  Bing News

 

What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
Scroll To Top