34 research outputs found

    Depolarization of multidomain ferroelectric materials

    Get PDF
    Depolarization in ferroelectric materials has been studied since the 1970s, albeit quasi-statically. The dynamics are described by the empirical Merz law, which gives the polarization switching time as a function of electric field, normalized to the so-called activation field. The Merz law has been used for decades; its origin as domain-wall depinning has recently been corroborated by molecular dynamics simulations. Here we experimentally investigate domain-wall depinning by measuring the dynamics of depolarization. We find that the boundary between thermodynamically stable and depolarizing regimes can be described by a single constant, Pr/ε0εferroEc. Among different multidomain ferroelectric materials the values of coercive field, Ec, dielectric constant, εferro, and remanent polarization, Pr, vary by orders of magnitude; the value for Pr/ε0εferroEc however is comparable, about 15. Using this extracted universal value, we show that the depolarization field is similar to the activation field, which corresponds to the transition from creep to domain-wall flow.Aerospace Structures & MaterialsNovel Aerospace Material

    Alterung ferroelektrischer Keramiken

    Full text link

    Alterung ferroelektrischer Keramiken

    Full text link

    Aging and fatigue in bulk ferroelectric perovskite ceramics

    Full text link

    Coupled losses in PZT near the morphotropic phase boundary

    Full text link
    corecore