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      Giant Electrostrain in Lead‐Free Textured Piezoceramics by Defect Dipole Design

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          Abstract

          By converting electrical signal into mechanical displacement, piezoelectric actuators are widely used in many applications due to their precise displacement, fast response, and small size. The unipolar electrostrain values larger than 1% reported so far are from lead‐based single crystals or ceramics, which brings environmental concerns. Herein, a giant unipolar electrostrain of 1.6% with good fatigue resistance and low hysteresis in Sr/Nb‐doped Bi 0.5(Na 0.82K 0.18) 0.5TiO 3 lead‐free textured piezoceramics by defect dipole design is reported, which is comparable to or even higher than state‐of‐the‐art lead‐based piezoelectric single crystals. The engineered defect dipoles in ergodic relaxor ferroelectrics can introduce a large internal bias field along the poling direction, where the 〈111〉‐oriented defect dipoles with large polarizability aligning along the 〈111〉‐oriented spontaneous polarizations of the electric‐field‐induced ferroelectric phase greatly benefit the reversible phase‐transition process of the 〈00 l〉‐textured ceramic. In‐depth microstructural studies reveal that the greatly enhanced electrostrain is realized by the synergistic contributions from the reversible electric‐field‐induced phase transition, grain orientation engineering, and most importantly, defect dipole engineering. The present research provides a general strategy for the design of piezoceramics with high electrostrain, which is expected to be promising alternative to lead‐based piezoelectric actuators.

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          Most cited references46

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          Revised effective ionic radii and systematic studies of interatomic distances in halides and chalcogenides

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            Ferroelectric, dielectric and piezoelectric properties of ferroelectric thin films and ceramics

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              Large electric-field-induced strain in ferroelectric crystals by point-defect-mediated reversible domain switching.

              Ferroelectric crystals are characterized by their asymmetric or polar structures. In an electric field, ions undergo asymmetric displacement and result in a small change in crystal dimension, which is proportional to the applied field. Such electric-field-induced strain (or piezoelectricity) has found extensive applications in actuators and sensors. However, the effect is generally very small and thus limits its usefulness. Here I show that with a different mechanism, an aged BaTiO(3) single crystal can generate a large recoverable nonlinear strain of 0.75% at a low field of 200 V mm(-1). At the same field this value is about 40 times higher than piezoelectric Pb(Zr, Ti)O(3) (PZT) ceramics and more than 10 times higher than the high-strain Pb(Zn(1/3)Nb(2/3))O(3)-PbTiO(3) (PZN-PT) single crystals. This large electro-strain stems from an unusual reversible domain switching (most importantly the switching of non-180 degrees domains) in which the restoring force is provided by a general symmetry-conforming property of point defects. This mechanism provides a general method to achieve large electro-strain effect in a wide range of ferroelectric systems and the effect may lead to novel applications in ultra-large stroke and nonlinear actuators.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Advanced Materials
                Wiley
                0935-9648
                1521-4095
                July 2023
                June 04 2023
                July 2023
                : 35
                : 29
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Materials Sun Yat‐sen University Shenzhen 518107 China
                [2 ] Institute for Superconducting and Electronic Materials Australian Institute for Innovative Materials University of Wollongong Wollongong NSW 2500 Australia
                Article
                10.1002/adma.202300519
                8aff89e7-036e-483a-8b75-b9f331f2ba1b
                © 2023

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