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The origin of ultrahigh piezoelectricity in relaxor-ferroelectric solid solution crystals

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posted on 2024-11-15, 19:20 authored by Fei Li, Shujun ZhangShujun Zhang, Tiannan Yang, Zhuo Xu, Nan Zhang, Gang Liu, Jianjun Wang, Jianli WangJianli Wang, Zhenxiang ChengZhenxiang Cheng, Zuo-Guang Ye, Jun Luo, Thomas R Shrout, Long-Qing Chen
The discovery of ultrahigh piezoelectricity in relaxor-ferroelectric solid solution single crystals is a breakthrough in ferroelectric materials. A key signature of relaxor-ferroelectric solid solutions is the existence of polar nanoregions, a nanoscale inhomogeneity, that coexist with normal ferroelectric domains. Despite two decades of extensive studies, the contribution of polar nanoregions to the underlying piezoelectric properties of relaxor ferroelectrics has yet to be established. Here we quantitatively characterize the contribution of polar nanoregions to the dielectric/piezoelectric responses of relaxor-ferroelectric crystals using a combination of cryogenic experiments and phase-field simulations. The contribution of polar nanoregions to the room-temperature dielectric and piezoelectric properties is in the range of 50-80%. A mesoscale mechanism is proposed to reveal the origin of the high piezoelectricity in relaxor ferroelectrics, where the polar nanoregions aligned in a ferroelectric matrix can facilitate polarization rotation. This mechanism emphasizes the critical role of local structure on the macroscopic properties of ferroelectric materials.

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Citation

Li, F., Zhang, S., Yang, T., Xu, Z., Zhang, N., Liu, G., Wang, J., Wang, J., Cheng, Z., Ye, Z., Luo, J., Shrout, T. R. & Chen, L. (2016). The origin of ultrahigh piezoelectricity in relaxor-ferroelectric solid solution crystals. Nature Communications, 7 13807-1-13807-9.

Journal title

Nature Communications

Volume

7

Language

English

RIS ID

111440

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