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Auteurs principaux: Harbola, Varun, Cozannet, Thomas Emil le, Alikin, Denis, Yun, Shinhee, Dollekamp, Edwin, Insinga, Andrea Roberto, Bjørk, Rasmus, Vitaliti, Nikolas, Jespersen, Thomas Sand, Wurster, Katja Isabelle, Park, Dae-Sung, Mannhart, Jochen, Pryds, Nini
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2026
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.17959
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author Harbola, Varun
Cozannet, Thomas Emil le
Alikin, Denis
Yun, Shinhee
Dollekamp, Edwin
Insinga, Andrea Roberto
Bjørk, Rasmus
Vitaliti, Nikolas
Jespersen, Thomas Sand
Wurster, Katja Isabelle
Park, Dae-Sung
Mannhart, Jochen
Pryds, Nini
author_facet Harbola, Varun
Cozannet, Thomas Emil le
Alikin, Denis
Yun, Shinhee
Dollekamp, Edwin
Insinga, Andrea Roberto
Bjørk, Rasmus
Vitaliti, Nikolas
Jespersen, Thomas Sand
Wurster, Katja Isabelle
Park, Dae-Sung
Mannhart, Jochen
Pryds, Nini
contents Mechanical instabilities in thin solids offer a powerful route to engineer nonlinear responses, yet their controlled use in functional crystalline oxides has remained largely unexplored. Notably, by changing the aspect ratio of solids, the energy landscape around equilibrium can be modified to induce non-linearities under lateral stresses through non-lateral deformations. These nonlinear systems can develop multiple local energy minima where the system can settle and switch between states through the application of a driving force. Crucially, recent advances in oxide thin film growth have enabled the fabrication of freestanding oxide membranes, paving a viable path for their use in bistable architecture, particularly at the nanoscale. Here, we demonstrate that freestanding oxide membranes, such as SrTiO3 (STO) and BaTiO3 (BTO), relax into well-defined metastable buckling states when transferred onto lithographically defined cavities. The membrane deformation is determined by the interplay between built-in residual strain, bending stiffness, and cavity geometry, resulting in reproducible bistable states with distinct strain distributions. Using a combination of atomic force microscopy, in-contact Kelvin probe measurements, and finite-element modelling, we reveal that these mechanically locked states directly shape the electromechanical potential landscape of ferroelectric BaTiO3. We further demonstrate reversible snapthrough transitions between mechanically degenerate states, establishing complex oxides as deterministic, geometry-tunable building blocks for nonlinear nanoelectromechanical architectures. Our results illustrate a general strategy for exploiting mechanical instabilities to encode and manipulate functional responses in ultrathin crystalline membranes.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_17959
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Instability-driven mechanically locked states in functional oxide membranes
Harbola, Varun
Cozannet, Thomas Emil le
Alikin, Denis
Yun, Shinhee
Dollekamp, Edwin
Insinga, Andrea Roberto
Bjørk, Rasmus
Vitaliti, Nikolas
Jespersen, Thomas Sand
Wurster, Katja Isabelle
Park, Dae-Sung
Mannhart, Jochen
Pryds, Nini
Materials Science
Mechanical instabilities in thin solids offer a powerful route to engineer nonlinear responses, yet their controlled use in functional crystalline oxides has remained largely unexplored. Notably, by changing the aspect ratio of solids, the energy landscape around equilibrium can be modified to induce non-linearities under lateral stresses through non-lateral deformations. These nonlinear systems can develop multiple local energy minima where the system can settle and switch between states through the application of a driving force. Crucially, recent advances in oxide thin film growth have enabled the fabrication of freestanding oxide membranes, paving a viable path for their use in bistable architecture, particularly at the nanoscale. Here, we demonstrate that freestanding oxide membranes, such as SrTiO3 (STO) and BaTiO3 (BTO), relax into well-defined metastable buckling states when transferred onto lithographically defined cavities. The membrane deformation is determined by the interplay between built-in residual strain, bending stiffness, and cavity geometry, resulting in reproducible bistable states with distinct strain distributions. Using a combination of atomic force microscopy, in-contact Kelvin probe measurements, and finite-element modelling, we reveal that these mechanically locked states directly shape the electromechanical potential landscape of ferroelectric BaTiO3. We further demonstrate reversible snapthrough transitions between mechanically degenerate states, establishing complex oxides as deterministic, geometry-tunable building blocks for nonlinear nanoelectromechanical architectures. Our results illustrate a general strategy for exploiting mechanical instabilities to encode and manipulate functional responses in ultrathin crystalline membranes.
title Instability-driven mechanically locked states in functional oxide membranes
topic Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.17959