Abstract

Thermal conductivity k dominates in a heat transfer medium, and a field modulated k would facilitate delicate control in thermal management technology, yet it is hardly realized in a single solid material unless with changing temperature. Herein, in BaTiO3 ceramic, a modulated k was discovered by adjusting ferroelectric polarization P, which was a conventional strategy in ferroelectric functional materials. Four different states (P1, P2, P3, P4) were obtained by controlling poling time and field strength, showing that k leaped from 2.704 ± 0.054 to 3.201 ± 0.070 W (m K)-1 with increased P. Moreover, the strong correlation between P and k was also verified by the thermal depolarization measurement from room temperature to Curie temperature. The underlying origin of P modulated k was attributed to the internal bias field, which is born in the oriented ferroelectric domains, tightening special phonon modes in BaTiO3 ceramics. Raman spectrum, P-E loops, first-order reversible curve, XRD analysis, and PFM measurement were then employed to clarify how ferroelectric polarization structurally influences phonon transport and subsequent thermal conductivity. This work will pave a brand-new research route for conventional ferroelectric ceramic, also potentiating the idea of the electric field-controlled k component and active solid heat-transport device in the future.

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