Abstract

A porous barium titanate (BaTiO3) thin film was chemically synthesized using a surfactant-assisted sol-gel method in which micelles of amphipathic diblock copolymers served as structure-directing agents. In the Raman spectrum of the porous BaTiO3 thin film, a peak corresponding to the ferroelectric tetragonal phase was observed at around 710 cm−1, and it remained stable at much higher temperature than the Curie temperature of bulk single-crystal BaTiO3 (∼130 °C). Measurements revealed that the ferroelectricity of the BaTiO3 thin film has high thermal stability. By analyzing high-resolution transmission electron microscope images of the BaTiO3 thin film by the fast Fourier transform mapping method, the spatial distribution of stress in the BaTiO3 framework was clearly visualized. Careful analysis also indicated that the porosity in the BaTiO3 thin film introduced anisotropic compressive stress, which deformed the crystals. The resulting elongated unit cell caused further displacement of the Ti4+ cation from the center of the lattice. This displacement increased the electric dipole moment of the BaTiO3 thin film, effectively enhancing its ferro(piezo)electricity.

Highlights

  • Origin of thermally stable ferroelectricity in a porous barium titanate thin film synthesized through block copolymer templating

  • When the temperature increases to the Curie temperature (T C), the phase transition to the cubic phase occurs

  • The enhancement of T C is limited to very thin films,3,4 which are impractical for device applications

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Summary

Introduction

Origin of thermally stable ferroelectricity in a porous barium titanate thin film synthesized through block copolymer templating. We visualize the stress within the porous framework of a mesoporous BT film and clarify the thermal stability of the ferroelectric (tetragonal) phase induced by such stress.

Results
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