Abstract

The generic case of a ferroelectric solid solution is considered wherein different symmetry phases located at opposing ends of the diffusionless phase diagram are separated by a morphotropic boundary (MB). It is shown that the Landau theory of weak first-order phase transformations automatically predicts vanishing of the anisotropy of polarization, continuity of thermodynamic properties, and a drastic decrease in domain wall energy near the MB line that results in the formation of adaptive ferroelectric nanodomain states. Low-resolution diffraction from these adaptive states acquired at the coherence lengths of elastic x-ray or neutron scattering probes will produce the same diffraction pattern as attributed to monoclinic (MA,MB,MC) phases. It is further shown that the electric- or stress-field-induced reconfiguration of these adaptive nanodomain states results in a softening of the piezoelectric, elastic, and dielectric properties near the MB line. In addition, the spherical degeneration of the polarization direction, reflecting the decoupling of the polarization from the crystal lattice at the MB, also predicts the formation of a polar glass state whose properties should be similar to the special properties of amorphous ferromagnets. In particular, the vanishing of the polarization anisotropy at the MB should result in ferroelectric domains with irregular shapes exhibiting high configurational sensitivity to external forces. The theory further predicts that two tricritical points will occur on the line of paraelectric→ferroelectric transitions and it is shown that all two-phase equilibrium lines of the diffusionless phase diagram—including the MB line—must be replaced by two-phase fields. Within these two-phase fields, the adjacent ferroelectric-ferroelectric and paraelectric-ferroelectric phases coexist. Possible topologies of the equilibrium MB phase diagram illustrating these two-phase equilibrium fields are computed and discussed.

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