Abstract

An exhaustive temperature dependent structural and dielectric study of the tetragonal tungsten bronze-type Sr(2)NaNb(5)O(15) (SNN) compound has been performed in the 300-100 K temperature range, by combining X-ray, neutron diffraction, and transmission electron microscopy with dielectric measurements, in order to clarify the structural effects responsible for the observed low temperature dielectric properties. Interestingly, a relevant second anomaly in the dielectric constant, in addition to the ferroelectric (FE) to paraelectric (PE) transition at T(C) = 518 K is found at T ≈ 240 K, revealing a relaxor-like behavior of the material at low temperature. This phenomenon has been previously observed in FE perovskite-type phases and referred to as the re-entrant phenomenon. However, FE polarization tends to vanish below this low temperature dielectric anomaly and this fact is not expected for a classical relaxor-ferroelectric phase. Although there is no structural transition from RT to 100 K, there is a change in the elastic properties of the material in the considered temperature range and the intense anomaly at ~240 K could be associated to a smeared-out phase transition to a frustrated FE/ferroelastic (FEL) low temperature state in correlation with subtle structural effects.

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