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Ferrielectricity in the Archetypal Antiferroelectric, PbZrO 3 .

Yulian YaoAaron NadenMengkun TianSergey LisenkovZachary BellerAmit KumarJosh KacherInna PonomarevaNazanin Bassiri-Gharb
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Antiferroelectric materials, where the transition between antipolar and polar phase is controlled by external electric fields, offer exceptional energy storage capacity with high efficiencies, giant electrocaloric effect, and superb electromechanical response. PbZrO 3 is the first discovered and the archetypal antiferroelectric material. Nonetheless, substantial challenges in processing phase pure PbZrO 3 have limited studies of the undoped composition, hindering understanding of the phase transitions in this material or unraveling the controversial origins of a low-field ferroelectric phase observed in lead zirconate thin films. Leveraging highly oriented PbZrO 3 thin films, a room temperature ferrielectric phase is observed in absence of external electric fields, with modulations of amplitude and direction of the spontaneous polarization and large anisotropy for critical electric fields required for phase transition. The ferrielectric state observations are qualitatively consistent with theoretical predictions, and correlate with very high dielectric tunability, and ultra-high strains (up to 1.1%). This work suggests a need for re-evaluation of the fundamental science of antiferroelectricity in this archetypal material. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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