2163 Abstract
|Table of Contents|

Aging phenomenon in ferroelectrics and the related large recoverable electro-strain effect(PDF)

MATERIALS CHINA[ISSN:1674-3962/CN:61-1473/TG]

Issue:
2016年第6期
Page:
31-35
Research Field:
特约研究论文
Publishing date:

Info

Title:
Aging phenomenon in ferroelectrics and the related large recoverable electro-strain effect
Author(s):
ZHANG Lixue REN Xiaobing
State Key Laboratory for Mechanical Behavior of Materials, School of Materials Science and Engineering, and Frontier institute for Science and Technology, Xi’an Jiaotong University
Keywords:
-
CLC:

PACS:
-
DOI:
10.7502/j.issn.1674-3962.2016.06.07
DocumentCode:

Abstract:
Ferroelectric aging usually refers to a gradual changing of properties with time. It lowers the reliability of ferroelectric devices and is usually undesirable for ferroelectrics. The occurrence of aging is closely related with the diffusion of mobile defects in ferroelectrics, yet a microscopic mechanism remains unclear. In the present paper, the authors pointed out that aging is microscopically driven by a symmetry conforming force of defect symmetry to crystal symmetry, based on the proposed symmetry-conforming short-range-order (SC-SRO) principle of point defects in ferroelectric crystals (X Ren, Nature Materials, 3: 91, 2004). More importantly, a giant recoverable electro-strain in aged BaTiO3-based ferroelectrics was obtained via a defect mediated reversible domain switching, which is 40 times larger than the traditional electro-strain effect. The results provide a promising way for designating high electro-strain materials. Besides, direct evidence for the reversible domain switching process behind the large recoverable electro-strain was given by an in situ polarizing microscope observation. The symmetry relation between point defects and crystals was also discussed in light of the SC-SRO principle and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Multi-scale novel effects are expected from the time-lag between the symmetry changing of crystals and point defects.

References

Memo

Memo:
Last Update: 2016-05-27