4.2 Article

Piezoelectricity in nominally centrosymmetric phases

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW RESEARCH
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.043221

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Natural National Science Foundation of China [51850410520]
  2. EPSRC [EP/P024904/1]
  3. EU's Horizon 2020 programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant [861153]
  4. MINECO [SEV-2017-0706]
  5. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017 SGR 579]
  6. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF-DMR-CMMT Grant) [DMR-1724791]
  7. NDF DMREF program [DMREF-1921949]
  8. EPSRC [EP/P024904/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The translation discusses the phenomenon of symmetry breaking in composite phases and the measurement methods. Experimental studies have shown that the effective piezoelectric modulus in unpoled ferroelectric phases is similar to that of paraelectric phases, with extremely low values of symmetry-forbidden piezoelectric effect ranging from approximately 1 to 10^(-5) pm/V, making it detectable through resonant piezoelectric spectroscopy.
Compound phases often display properties that are symmetry forbidden relative to their nominal, average crystallographic symmetry, even if extrinsic reasons (defects, strain, or imperfections) are not apparent. Specifically, breaking the macroscopic inversion symmetry of a centrosymmetric phase can dominate or significantly change its observed properties while the detailed mechanisms and magnitudes of the deviations of symmetry breaking are often obscure. Here, we choose piezoelectricity as a tool to investigate macroscopic inversion-symmetry breaking in nominally centrosymmetric materials as a prominent example and measure resonant piezoelectric spectroscopy (RPS) and Resonant Ultrasound Spectroscopy (RUS) in 15 compounds, 18 samples, and 21 different phases, including unpoled ferroelectrics, paraelectrics, relaxors, ferroelastics, incipient ferroelectrics, and isotropic materials with low defect concentrations, i.e., NaCl, fused silica, and CaF2. We exclude the flexoelectric effect as a source of the observed piezoelectricity yet observe piezoelectricity in all nominally cubic phases of these samples. By scaling the RPS intensities with those of RUS, we calibrate the effective piezoelectric coefficients using single-crystal quartz as standard. Using this scaling we determine the effective piezoelectric modulus in nominally nonpiezoelectric phases, finding that the symmetry-forbidden piezoelectric effect ranges from similar to 1 to 10(-5) pm/V (similar to 0.5% to similar to 2 x 10(-5)% of the piezoelectric coefficient of poled ferroelectric lead zirconate titanate). The values for the unpoled ferroelectric phase are only slightly higher than those in the paraelectric phase. The extremely low coefficients are well below the detection limit of conventional piezoelectric measurements and demonstrate RPS as a convenient and ultrahighly sensitive method to measure piezoelectricity. We suggest that symmetry-breaking piezoelectricity in nominally centrosymmetric materials and disordered, unpoled ferroelectrics is a common phenomenon.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available