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Recent progress in the piezoelectricity of molecular ferroelectrics

Journal

MATERIALS CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 44-59

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0qm00288g

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21925502]

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Molecular ferroelectrics (MOFEs) with excellent piezoelectricity have gained attention in recent years, with high-performance materials approaching or exceeding traditional inorganic piezoelectric ceramics. Through a review of reported MOFEs, various methods and strategies for enhancing performance and targeting specific applications have been summarized.
Molecular ferroelectrics (MOFEs) with excellent piezoelectricity are highly desirable for their easy and environmentally friendly processing, light weight, low processing temperature, and mechanical flexibility. However, although 100 years have passed since the discovery of the ferroelectric effect in 1920, MOFEs with a piezoelectric coefficient comparable to those of the most widely used piezoelectric ceramics, such as barium titanate (similar to 190 pC N-1), have rarely been found. Only in recent years has this situation changed. A series of high-performance piezoelectric MOFEs have been designed and synthesized, approaching or even exceeding some inorganic piezoelectric ceramics. Reviewing on the basis of piezoelectric MOFEs reported, we summarize several methods and strategies to synthesize performance-enhanced and application-aimed piezoelectric MOFEs, with potential as candidates for next-generation medical, micromechanical, and biomechanical devices.

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