Abstract
Heat treatment of lithium niobate (LiNbO3) plates induces domain inversion, thereby yielding a ferroelectric inversion layer. In such a piezoelectric plate with an inversion layer, even-order thickness-extensional modes, as well as odd-order modes, can be excited piezoelectrically. Therefore, ultrasonic transducers using such a piezoelectric plate are expected to operate over a wide frequency range. In this paper, it is shown both theoretically and experimentally that broadband ultrasonic transducers for radiation to solid media can be obtained when the inversion layer is on the side of the acoustic load medium and the inversion layer-to-plate thickness ratio is around 0.3. A 50–110 MHz ultrasonic transducer was fabricated using 36°-rotated Y-cut LiNbO3 plates with an inversion layer. The conversion loss characteristic was evaluated when the transducer was bonded to an acoustic medium of fused silica by a low-temperature Au diffusion bonding technique. The 3 dB specific bandwidth was as large as 74% and the minimum conversion loss was as low as 2 dB.
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