4.6 Article

Phase separation in lead zirconate titanate and bismuth titanate during electrical shorting and fatigue

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 99, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.2171783

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Micro-Raman and electron microprobe techniques are used to show that lead zirconate titanate and samarium-doped bismuth titanate undergo local phase transformations and separation during electrical shorting and in the dendritic precursors to microshorts caused by bipolar fatigue. These precursors for shorts, consisting of dark filaments, were studied just before they completely shorted the sample. The aim of the study was to compare electrical breakdown and breakdown precursors in ABO(3) perovskite oxides and related Aurivillius phase layer structures with Bi (A site) substitution and with B-site substitution (e.g., Ti for Zr in PZT). The observation of phase separation and decomposition is related to congruent and incongruent meltings in these materials. Dendritelike shorts and short precursors of a few microns in diameter, produced by extreme bipolar voltage cycling fatigue, are mapped spectroscopically in 1 mu m(2) areas and exhibit almost pure regions of alpha-PbO, beta-PbO, and rutile TiO2. The alpha-beta PbO phase boundary runs from 500 degrees C at 1 atm to room temperature at 0.4 GPa, easily accessible temperatures and pressures in the dynamical process. Similarly, under large dc voltages the Sm-doped bismuth titanate transforms from a layered-perovskite structure to a pyrochlore structure during filamentary electrical breakdown, with the loss of Bi. The interfacial phase separation has been attributed to the combination of defect aggregation and thermal decomposition effects. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics.

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