Ergodicity reflected in macroscopic and microscopic field-dependent behavior of BNT-based relaxors
Author(s) -
Robert Dittmer,
Danka Gobeljic,
Wook Jo,
Vladimir V. Shvartsman,
Doru C. Lupascu,
Jacob L. Jones,
Jürgen Rödel
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of applied physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1089-7550
pISSN - 0021-8979
DOI - 10.1063/1.4867157
Subject(s) - piezoresponse force microscopy , electric field , condensed matter physics , materials science , relaxation (psychology) , ergodicity , hysteresis , diffraction , field (mathematics) , pyroelectricity , neutron diffraction , phase transition , microstructure , ferroelectricity , optics , physics , dielectric , composite material , optoelectronics , mathematics , psychology , social psychology , quantum mechanics , pure mathematics
The effect of heterovalent B-site doping on ergodicity of relaxor ferroelectrics is studied using (1 - y)(0.81Bi(1/2)Na(1/2)TiO(3)-0.19Bi(1/2)K(1/2)TiO(3))-yBiZn(1/2)Ti(1/2)O(3) (BNT-BKT-BZT) with y - {0.02;0.03;0.04} as a model system. Both the large- and small-signal parameters are studied as a function of electric field. The crystal structure is assessed by means of neutron diffraction in the initial state and after exposure to a high electric field. In order to measure ferroelastic domain textures, diffraction patterns of the poled samples are collected as a function of sample rotation angle. Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) is employed to probe the microstructure for polar regions at a nanoscopic scale. For low electric fields E < 2 kV.mm(-1), large- and small-signal constitutive behavior do not change with composition. At high electric fields, however, drastic differences are observed due to a field-induced phase transition into a long-range ordered state. It is hypothesized that increasing BZT content decreases the degree of non-ergodicity; thus, the formation of long-range order is impeded. It is suggested that frozen and dynamic polar nano regions exist to a different degree, depending on the BZT content. This image is supported by PFM measurements. Moreover, PFM measurements suggest that the relaxation mechanism after removal of the bias field is influenced by surface chargesopen2
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