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The noise of many needles: Jerky domain wall propagation in PbZrO3 and LaAlO3
Author(s) -
Sabine Puchberger,
Viktor Soprunyuk,
W. Schranz,
A. Tröster,
Krystian Roleder,
A. Majchrowski,
Michael A. Carpenter,
Ekhard K. H. Salje
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
apl materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.571
H-Index - 60
ISSN - 2166-532X
DOI - 10.1063/1.4979616
Subject(s) - materials science , condensed matter physics , power law , intermittency , domain wall (magnetism) , drop (telecommunication) , exponent , superposition principle , maxima , noise (video) , yield (engineering) , thermal fluctuations , domain (mathematical analysis) , exponential function , thermodynamics , physics , composite material , magnetic field , art , philosophy , image (mathematics) , computer science , mathematics , artificial intelligence , mathematical analysis , linguistics , magnetization , telecommunications , quantum mechanics , art history , statistics , performance art , turbulence
Measurements of the sample length of PbZrO3 and LaAlO3 under slowly increasing force (3-30 mN/min) yield a superposition of a continuous decrease interrupted by discontinuous drops. This strain intermittency is induced by the jerky movement of ferroelastic domain walls through avalanches near the depinning threshold. At temperatures close to the domain freezing regime, the distributions of the calculated squared drop velocity maxima N(υm2) follow a power law behaviour with exponents ε=1.6±0.2. This is in good agreement with the energy exponent ε=1.8±0.2 recently found for the movement of a single needle tip in LaAlO3 [R. J. Harrison and E. K. H. Salje, Appl. Phys. Lett. 97, 021907 (2010)]. With increasing temperature, N(υm2) changes from a power law at low temperatures to an exponential law at elevated temperatures, indicating that thermal fluctuations increasingly enable domain wall segments to unpin even when the driving force is smaller than the corresponding barrier

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