posted on 2020-07-09, 11:33authored byLiam Collins, Rama K. Vasudevan, Alp Sehirlioglu
Charge-transport
and electrochemical processes are heavily influenced
by the local microstructure. Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM)
is a widely used technique to map electrochemical potentials at the
nanometer scale; however, it offers little information on local charge
dynamics. Here, we implement a hyperspectral KPFM approach for spatially
mapping bias-dependent charge dynamics in timescales ranging from
the sub-millisecond to the second regime. As a proof of principle,
we investigate the role mobile surface charges play in a three-unit-cell
LaAlO3/SrTiO3 oxide heterostructure. We explore
machine learning approaches to assist with visualization, pattern
recognition, and interpretation of the information-rich data sets.
Linear unmixing methods reveal hidden bias-dependent interfacial processes,
most likely water splitting, which are essentially unnoticed by functional
fitting of the dynamic response alone. Hyperspectral KPFM will be
beneficial for investigating nanoscale charge transport and local
reactivity in systems involving a possible combination of electronic,
ionic, and electrochemical phenomena.