Abstract

Traditional strategies for improving piezoelectric properties have focused on phase boundary engineering through complex chemical alloying and phase control. Although they have been successfully employed in bulk materials, they have not been effective in thin films due to the severe deterioration in epitaxy, which is critical to film properties. Contending with the opposing effects of alloying and epitaxy in thin films has been a long-standing issue. Herein we demonstrate a new strategy in alkali niobate epitaxial films, utilizing alkali vacancies without alloying to form nanopillars enclosed with out-of-phase boundaries that can give rise to a giant electromechanical response. Both atomically resolved polarization mapping and phase field simulations show that the boundaries are strained and charged, manifesting as head-head and tail-tail polarization bound charges. Such charged boundaries produce a giant local depolarization field, which facilitates a steady polarization rotation between the matrix and nanopillars. The local elastic strain and charge manipulation at out-of-phase boundaries, demonstrated here, can be used as an effective pathway to obtain large electromechanical response with good temperature stability in similar perovskite oxides.

Highlights

  • Traditional strategies for improving piezoelectric properties have focused on phase boundary engineering through complex chemical alloying and phase control

  • Since 20048, significant progress has been made in KNN based bulk piezoceramics[9,10,11,12,13,14,15]

  • As piezoelectric devices continue to be miniaturized, thin films with high piezoelectric response are in demand for micro- and nano-electromechanical systems (MEMS and NMES) applications[20]

Read more

Summary

Results and discussions

Epitaxial NNO films with nanopillars (NP-NNO) were grown on Nb-doped SrTiO3 (001) by a sputtering process (see Supplementary Methods). This shows four nanopillars grown within the film vertically from the interface to the surface. Since Na is quite deficient at the beginning, some Nb atoms could occupy Na positions as NbNa antisites and form a 2D region with OOP boundaries The interface is an STO substrate with TiO2 termination connecting the first NaO layer of the NNO film, where Nb atoms occupy the Na positions in the nanopillar region.

NNO with NP
Single Charged
Author contributions
Additional information
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call