Self-stabilization of the equilibrium state in ferroelectric thin films

Abstract

(K,Na)NbO3 is a lead-free and sustainable ferroelectric material with electromechanical parameters comparable to Pb(Zr,Ti)O3 (PZT) and other lead-based solid solutions. It is therefore a promising candidate for caloric cooling and energy harvesting applications. Specifically, the structural transition from the low-temperature Mc- to the high-temperature c-phase displays a rich hierarchical order of domains and superdomains, that forms at specific strain conditions. The relevant length scales are few tens of nanometers for the domain and few micrometers for the superdomain size, respectively. Phase-field calculations show that this hierarchical order adds to the total free energy of the solid. Thus, domains and their formation has a strong impact on the functional properties relevant for electrocaloric cooling or energy harvesting applications. However, monitoring the formation of domains and superdomains is difficult and requires both, high spatial and high temporal resolution of the experiment. Synchrotron-based time-resolved X-ray diffraction methods in combination with scanning imaging X-ray microscopy is applied to resolve the local dynamics of the domain morphology with sub-micrometer spatial and nanosecond temporal resolution. In this regime, the material displays a novel self-stabilization mechanism of the domain morphology, which may be a general property of first-order phase transitions.

Description
Keywords
Electrocalorics, Multiferroics, Phase transitions, Piezoelectrics, Time-resolved XRD
Citation
Gaal, P., Schmidt, D., Khosla, M., Richter, C., Boesecke, P., Novikov, D., et al. (2022). Self-stabilization of the equilibrium state in ferroelectric thin films. 613. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.apsusc.2022.155891
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported