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Temperature and E-Poling Evolution of Structural, Vibrational, Dielectric, and Ferroelectric Properties of Ba 1-x Sr x TiO 3 Ceramics (x = 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4 and 0.45).

Jan SuchaniczDorota SitkoKrzysztof StanuchKonrad ŚwierczekGrzegorz JagłoAndrzej KrukKamila Kluczewska-ChmielarzKrzysztof KoniecznyPiotr CzajaJakub AleksandrowiczWojciech WieczorekJustyna GrygierekMariusz SokolowskiGrzegorz StachowskiMaija AntonovaAndris Sternberg
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Lead-free Ba 1-x Sr x TiO 3 (BST) (x = 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4 and 0.45) ceramics were successfully prepared via the solid-state reaction route. A pure perovskite crystalline structure was identified for all compositions by X-ray diffraction analysis. The basic phase transition temperatures in these ceramics were studied over a wide temperature range. A change in symmetry from a tetragonal to cubic phase was detected, which was further proven by phonon anomalies in composition/temperature-dependent Raman spectra. The incorporation of Sr 2+ into BaTiO 3 (BT) lead to a shift in the phase transitions to lower temperatures, suppressing the ferroelectric properties and inducing relaxor-like behavior. Therefore, it was reasonable to suppose that the materials progressively lack long-range ordering. The initial second-harmonic generation (SHG) measurements demonstrated that the cubic phase of BST ceramics is not purely centrosymmetric over a wide temperature interval. We discussed the possible origin of the observed effects, and showed that electric field poling seems to reconstruct the structural ordering destroyed by the introduction of Sr 2+ to BT. In the first approximation, substitution of Sr for larger Ba simply reduced the space for the off-central shift in Ti in the lattice and hence the domain polarization. A-site cation ordering in BST and its influence on the density of electronic states were also explored. The effect of doping with strontium ions in the BST compound on the density of electronic states was investigated using ab initio methods. As the calculations showed, doping BT with Sr 2+ atoms led to an increase in the bandgap. The proposed calculations will also be used in the subsequent search for materials optimal for applications in photovoltaics.
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