Ultrasound irradiation makes it possible to generate alternating electric polarization through the electromechanical coupling of materials. It follows that electromagnetic fields are often emitted to the surrounding environment when materials are acoustically stimulated. We investigate the acoustically stimulated electromagnetic (ASEM) response of soft biological tissues. The ASEM signal is detected through a capacitive resonant antenna tuned to the MHz frequency of the irradiated ultrasound waves. The signal is well explained by the stress-induced polarization, which responds linearly to the applied acoustic stress. Induced polarization is clearly observed in the Achilles tendon, aortic wall, and aortic valve samples, whereas it is small in adipose tissue and myocardium samples, indicating that fibrous tissues exhibit electromechanical coupling.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.238101 | DOI Listing |
Nat Commun
December 2024
Key Laboratory for Quantum Materials of Zhejiang Province, Department of Physics, School of Science, Westlake University, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou, 310024, Zhejiang Province, China.
Extending ferroelectric materials to two-dimensional limit provides versatile applications for the development of next-generation nonvolatile devices. Conventional ferroelectricity requires materials consisting of at least two constituent elements associated with polar crystalline structures. Monolayer graphene as an elementary two-dimensional material unlikely exhibits ferroelectric order due to its highly centrosymmetric hexagonal lattices.
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December 2024
Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Spin-polarized edge states in two-dimensional materials hold promise for spintronics and quantum computing applications. Constructing stable edge states by tailoring two-dimensional semiconductor materials with bulk-boundary correspondence is a feasible approach. Recently layered NiI is suggested as a two-dimensional type-II multiferroic semiconductor with intrinsic spiral spin ordering and chirality-induced electric polarization.
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December 2024
Key Laboratory of Advanced Technologies of Materials (Ministry of Education), School of Materials Science and Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, 610031, China.
Piezoelectric electronics possess great potential in flexible sensing and energy harvesting applications. However, they suffer from low electromechanical performance in all-organic piezoelectric systems due to the disordered and weakly-polarized interfaces. Here, we demonstrated an all-polymer piezo-ionic-electric electronics with PVDF/Nafion/PVDF (polyvinylidene difluoride) sandwich structure and regularized ion-electron interfaces.
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December 2024
Institute of Micro/Nano Materials and Devices, Ningbo University of Technology, Ningbo, China.
Due to its "ferroionic" nature, CuInPS combines switchable ferroelectric polarization with highly mobile Cu ions, allowing for multiple resistance states. Its conductive mechanism involves ferroelectric switching, ion migration, and corresponding intercoupling, which are highly sensitive to external electric field. Distinguishing the dominant contribution of either ferroelectric switching or ion migration to dynamic conductivity remains a challenge and the conductive mechanism is not clear yet.
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December 2024
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive N.W., Calgary, T2N 1N4, AB, Canada.
Patterns of ionospheric luminosity provide a unique window into our complex, coupled space environment. The aurora, for example, indicates plasma processes occurring thousands of km away, depositing immense amounts of energy into our polar ionospheres. Here we show observations of structured continuum emission associated with the dynamic aurora.
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