Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding and manipulating the behavior of oxygen vacancy in oxide materials are of vital importance for rejuvenating materials with novel functionalities. We herein report a exciting phenomenon of oxygen vacancies changing from an isolated state to a clustered state in LiNbO3 single crystals. The clustering of the oxygen vacancies induces a relaxor‐like dielectric anomaly and a first‐order phase transition. The relaxor‐like dielectric anomaly was argued to be a pseudo‐relaxor behavior resulting from the combined contributions of a dipolar relaxation and a Maxwell‐Wagner relaxation. The first‐order phase transition was ascribed to be an electric‐ferroelectric phase transition. Interestingly, a well‐defined melting point of the oxygen‐vacancy clusters was observed. At temperatures near the point, a small dc field can lead to resistance switching from a high resistance state to a low resistance state, yielding a prominent memristive effect with the OFF/ON ratio of 102. Our results underscore that controlling the oxygen vacancy state is a promising strategy to tailor the properties of oxides for novel device applications.

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