Abstract

The acoustic properties of tetragonal PbxBa1−xNb2O6 (PBN-x) single crystals with x = 0.5 were studied by Brillouin spectroscopy over a wide temperature range from room temperature to 600 °C. Anomalous changes in the Brillouin frequency shift and the half width of acoustic waves were observed at ∼350 °C that corresponds to the ferroelectric–paraelectric phase transition temperature of PBN-0.50. The longitudinal sound velocity and its associated elastic constant (C33) showed substantial softening in the paraelectric phase when the phonon propagated along the polar c axis, while their degree of softening for the phonon along the a axis was small, revealing clear acoustic anisotropy. It was associated with the strong polarization dependence of the quasi-elastic central peak. The relaxation time derived from the central peak seemed to follow the critical slowing-down behavior indicating order–disorder nature of the phase transition. Among C44 and C66, the former displayed substantial softening in the ferroelectric phase resembling the order parameter behavior. The longitudinal sound velocity and the related acoustic damping showed significant anomalies in the ferroelectric phase of unpoled PBN-0.5, which disappeared completely under poled condition. The possible origin for these unexpected acoustic anomalies was suggested.

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