1 research outputs found
Electromechanical Coupling of Murine Lung Tissues Probed by Piezoresponse Force Microscopy
Elastin
is a major constituent of lung that makes up approximately
30% of lung’s dry weight, and the piezoelectricity of elastin
is expected to be exhibited in lung tissues. Because hundreds of millions
of cycles of inhalation and exhalation occur in one’s lifetime,
such piezoelectric effect leads to hundreds of millions of cycles
of charge generations in lung tissues, suggesting possible physiological
significance. Using piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM), we show
that the murine lung tissues are indeed piezoelectric, exhibiting
predominantly first harmonic piezoresponse in both vertical and lateral
modes. The second harmonic response, which could arise from ionic
motions, electrochemical dipoles, and electrostatic interactions,
is found to be small. The mappings of amplitude, phase, resonance
frequency, and quality factor of both vertical and lateral PFM are
also obtained, showing small fluctuation in frequency, but larger
variation in quality factor, and thus energy dissipation. The phase
mapping is confined in a small range, indicating a polar distribution
with preferred orientation. It is also found that the polarity of
the electromechanical coupling in lung tissues can be switched by
an external electric field, resulting in characteristic hysteresis
and butterfly loops, with a presence of internal bias in the polar
structure. It is hypothesized that the piezoelectric charge generation
during inhalation and exhalation could play a role in binding of oxygen
to hemoglobin, and the polarity switching can help damp out the possible
sudden increase in air pressure. We hope such observation of piezoelectricity
and its polarity switching in lung lay the foundation for the subsequent
studies of its physiological significance