1,467 research outputs found
Molecular ferroelectric contributions to anomalous hysteresis in hybrid perovskite solar cells
We report a model describing the molecular orientation disorder in
CH3NH3PbI3, solving a classical Hamiltonian parametrised with electronic
structure calculations, with the nature of the motions informed by ab-initio
molecular dynamics. We investigate the temperature and static electric field
dependence of the equilibrium ferroelectric (molecular) domain structure and
resulting polarisability. A rich domain structure of twinned molecular dipoles
is observed, strongly varying as a function of temperature and applied electric
field. We propose that the internal electrical fields associated with
microscopic polarisation domains contribute to hysteretic anomalies in the
current--voltage response of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells
due to variations in electron-hole recombination in the bulk.Comment: 10 pages; 4 figures, 2 SI figure
Surface reconstruction and ferroelectricity in PbTiO thin films
Surface and ferroelectric properties of PbTiO thin films are investigated
using an interatomic potential approach with parameters computed from
first-principles calculations. We show that a model developed for the bulk
describes properly the surface properties of PbTiO. In particular, the
antiferrodistortive surface reconstruction, recently observed from X-ray
scattering, is correctly reproduced as a result of the change in the balance of
long-range Coulombic and short-range interactions at the surface. The effects
of the surface reconstruction on the ferroelectric properties of ultrathin
films are investigated. Under the imposed open-circuit electrical boundary
conditions, the model gives a critical thickness for ferroelectricity of 4 unit
cells. The surface layer, which forms the antiferrodistortive reconstruction,
participates in the ferroelectricity. A decrease in the tetragonality of the
films leads to the stabilization of a phase with non-vanishing in-plane
polarization. A peculiar effect of the surface reconstruction on the in-plane
polarization profile is found.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Microscopic origin of Magnetic Ferroelectrics in Nonlinear Multiferroics
A simple but general microscopic mechanism to understand the interplay
between the electric and magnetic degrees of freedom is developed. Within this
mechanism, the magnetic structure generates an electric current which induce an
counterbalance electric current from the spin orbital coupling. When the
magnetic structure is described by a single order parameter, the electric
polarization is determined by the single spin orbital coupling parameter, and
the material is predicted to be a half insulator. This mechanism provides a
simple estimation of the value of ferroelectricity and sets a physical
limitation as well.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Conduction of topologically-protected charged ferroelectric domain walls
We report on the observation of nanoscale conduction at ferroelectric domain
walls in hexagonal HoMnO3 protected by the topology of multiferroic vortices
using in situ conductive atomic force microscopy, piezoresponse force
microscopy, and kelvin-probe force microscopy at low temperatures. In addition
to previously observed Schottky-like rectification at low bias [Phys. Rev.
Lett., 104, 217601 (2010)], conductance spectra reveal that negatively charged
tail-to-tail walls exhibit enhanced conduction at high forward bias, while
positively charged head-to-head walls exhibit suppressed conduction at high
reverse bias. Our results pave the way for understanding the semiconducting
properties of the domains and domain walls in small-gap ferroelectrics.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Elastic effects of vacancies in strontium titanate: Short- and long-range strain fields, elastic dipole tensors, and chemical strain
We present a study of the local strain effects associated with vacancy
defects in strontium titanate and report the first calculations of elastic
dipole tensors and chemical strains for point defects in perovskites. The
combination of local and long-range results will enable determination of x-ray
scattering signatures that can be compared with experiments. We find that the
oxygen vacancy possesses a special property -- a highly anisotropic elastic
dipole tensor which almost vanishes upon averaging over all possible defect
orientations. Moreover, through direct comparison with experimental
measurements of chemical strain, we place constraints on the possible defects
present in oxygen-poor strontium titanate and introduce a conjecture regarding
the nature of the predominant defect in strontium-poor stoichiometries in
samples grown via pulsed laser deposition. Finally, during the review process,
we learned of recent experimental data, from strontium titanate films deposited
via molecular-beam epitaxy, that show good agreement with our calculated value
of the chemical strain associated with strontium vacancies.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 4 table
First principles investigation of ferroelectricity in epitaxially strained PbTiO
The structure and polarization of the as-yet hypothetical Ruddlesden-Popper
compound PbTiO are investigated within density-functional theory. Zone
enter phonons of the high-symmetry KNiF-type reference structure, space
group , were calculated. At the theoretical ground-state lattice
constants, there is one unstable infrared-active phonon. This phonon freezes in
to give the ferroelectric state. As a function of epitaxial strain, two
additional ferroelectric phases are found, with space groups and
at compressive and tensile strains, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Domain Size Dependence of Piezoelectric Properties of Ferroelectrics
The domain size dependence of piezoelectric properties of ferroelectrics is
investigated using a continuum Ginzburg-Landau model that incorporates the
long-range elastic and electrostatic interactions. Microstructures with desired
domain sizes are created by quenching from the paraelectric phase by biasing
the initial conditions. Three different two-dimensional microstructures with
different sizes of the domains are simulated. An electric field is
applied along the polar as well as non-polar directions and the piezoelectric
response is simulated as a function of domain size for both cases. The
simulations show that the piezoelectric coefficients are enhanced by reducing
the domain size, consistent with recent experimental results of Wada and
Tsurumi (Brit. Ceram. Trans. {\bf 103}, 93, 2004) on domain engineered
Comment: submitted to Physical Review
An economic survey of New Zealand wheatgrowers : survey no. 2
This is survey number 2. No. 1 was know as "National wheatgrowers' survey"This Report is the second in an annual series of economic
surveys of New Zealand wheatgrowing farms. These surveys have been undertaken by the Agricultural Economics Research Unit
at Lincoln College on behalf of Wheat Growers Sub-Section of
Federated Farmers of New Zealand Inc.
Specific attention has been focused on the physical
characteristics of wheatgrowing farms, the area of wheat and
other crops sown, wheat yields, cultural practices and costs and
returns for the 1977/78 wheat crop. An attempt has also been
made to allocate plant and machinery overhead costs to the wheat
enterprise on both an historical and current cost basis.
The need for current and detailed information from the
Survey involved two visits to the farms in the sample; one in
the spring following drilling and the second in the autumn after
harvest
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