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Lead-free Zr-doped ceria ceramics with low permittivity displaying giant electrostriction.

Maxim VarenikBoyuan XuJunying LiElad GaverEllen WachtelDavid EhrePrahlad K RouthSergey KhodorovAnatoly I FrenkelYue QiIgor Lubomirsky
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Electrostrictors, materials developing mechanical strain proportional to the square of the applied electric field, present many advantages for mechanical actuation as they convert electrical energy into mechanical, but not vice versa. Both high relative permittivity and reliance on Pb as the key component in commercial electrostrictors pose serious practical and health problems. Here we describe a low relative permittivity (<250) ceramic, Zr x Ce 1-x O 2 (x < 0.2), that displays electromechanical properties rivaling those of the best performing electrostrictors: longitudinal electrostriction strain coefficient ~10 -16 m 2 /V 2 ; relaxation frequency ≈ a few kHz; and strain ≥0.02%. Combining X-ray absorption spectroscopy, atomic-level modeling and electromechanical measurements, here we show that electrostriction in Zr x Ce 1-x O 2 is enabled by elastic dipoles produced by anharmonic motion of the smaller isovalent dopant (Zr). Unlike the elastic dipoles in aliovalent doped ceria, which are present even in the absence of an applied elastic or electric field, the elastic dipoles in Zr x Ce 1-x O 2 are formed only under applied anisotropic field. The local descriptors of electrostrictive strain, namely, the cation size mismatch and dynamic anharmonicity, are sufficiently versatile to guide future searches in other polycrystalline solids.
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