580 research outputs found
Fluctuations, Higher Order Anharmonicities, and Landau Expansion for Barium Titanate
Correct phenomenological description of ferroelectric phase transitions in
barium titanate requires accounting for eighth-order terms in the free energy
expansion, in addition to the conventional sixth-order contributions. Another
unusual feature of BaTiO_3 crystal is that the coefficients B_1 and B_2 of the
terms P_x^4 and P_x^2*P_y^2 in the Landau expansion depend on the temperature.
It is shown that the temperature dependence of B_1 and B_2 may be caused by
thermal fluctuations of the polarization, provided the fourth-order
anharmonicity is anomalously small, i. e. the nonlinearity of P^4 type and
higher-order ones play comparable roles. Non-singular (non-critical)
fluctuation contributions to B_1 and B_2 are calculated in the first
approximation in sixth-order and eighth-order anharmonic constants. Both
contributions increase with the temperature, which is in agreement with
available experimental data. Moreover, the theory makes it possible to
estimate, without any additional assumptions, the ratio of fluctuation
(temperature dependent) contributions to coefficients B_1 and B_2. Theoretical
value of B_1/B_2 appears to be close to that given by experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Phenomenological theory of phase transitions in highly piezoelectric perovskites
Recently discovered fine structure of the morphotropic phase boundaries in
highly piezoelectric mixture compounds PZT, PMN-PT, and PZN-PT demonstrates the
importance of highly non-linear interactions in these systems. We show that an
adequate Landau-type description of the ferroelectric phase transitions in
these compounds is achieved by the use of a twelfth-order expansion of the
Landau potential in terms of the phenomenological order parameter.
Group-theoretical and catastrophe-theory methods are used in constructing the
appropriate Landau potential. A complete phase diagram is calculated in
phenomenological parameter space. The theory describes both PZT and PZN-PT
types of phase diagrams, including the newly found monoclinic and orthorhombic
phases. Anomalously large piezoelectric coefficients are predicted in the
vicinity of the phase transition lines.Comment: RevTex4, 8 pages, 2 figures. Dramatically changed after referees'
Comments, to appear in Phys. Rev. B, 1 April 200
High frequency polarization switching of a thin ferroelectric film
We consider both experimentally and analytically the transient oscillatory
process that arises when a rapid change in voltage is applied to a
ferroelectric thin film deposited on an substrate.
High frequency () polarization oscillations are observed
in the ferroelectric sample. These can be understood using a simple
field-polarization model. In particular we obtain analytic expressions for the
oscillation frequency and the decay time of the polarization fluctuation in
terms of the material parameters. These estimations agree well with the
experimental results
Structural phase transitions in epitaxial perovskite films
Three different film systems have been systematically investigated to
understand the effects of strain and substrate constraint on the phase
transitions of perovskite films. In SrTiO films, the phase transition
temperature T was determined by monitoring the superlattice peaks
associated with rotations of TiO octahedra. It is found that T depends
on both SrTiO film thickness and SrRuO buffer layer thickness. However,
lattice parameter measurements showed no sign of the phase transitions,
indicating that the tetragonality of the SrTiO unit cells was no longer a
good order parameter. This signals a change in the nature of this phase
transition, the internal degree of freedom is decoupled from the external
degree of freedom. The phase transitions occur even without lattice relaxation
through domain formation. In NdNiO thin films, it is found that the
in-plane lattice parameters were clamped by the substrate, while out-of-plane
lattice constant varied to accommodate the volume change across the phase
transition. This shows that substrate constraint is an important parameter for
epitaxial film systems, and is responsible for the suppression of external
structural change in SrTiO and NdNiO films. However, in SrRuO films
we observed domain formation at elevated temperature through x-ray reciprocal
space mapping. This indicated that internal strain energy within films also
played an important role, and may dominate in some film systems. The final
strain states within epitaxial films were the result of competition between
multiple mechanisms and may not be described by a single parameter.Comment: REVTeX4, 14 figure
Theory of structural response to macroscopic electric fields in ferroelectric systems
We have developed and implemented a formalism for computing the structural
response of a periodic insulating system to a homogeneous static electric field
within density-functional perturbation theory (DFPT). We consider the
thermodynamic potentials E(R,eta,e) and F(R,eta,e) whose minimization with
respect to the internal structural parameters R and unit cell strain eta yields
the equilibrium structure at fixed electric field e and polarization P,
respectively. First-order expansion of E(R,eta,e) in e leads to a useful
approximation in which R(P) and eta(P) can be obtained by simply minimizing the
zero-field internal energy with respect to structural coordinates subject to
the constraint of a fixed spontaneous polarization P. To facilitate this
minimization, we formulate a modified DFPT scheme such that the computed
derivatives of the polarization are consistent with the discretized form of the
Berry-phase expression. We then describe the application of this approach to
several problems associated with bulk and short-period superlattice structures
of ferroelectric materials such as BaTiO3 and PbTiO3. These include the effects
of compositionally broken inversion symmetry, the equilibrium structure for
high values of polarization, field-induced structural phase transitions, and
the lattice contributions to the linear and the non-linear dielectric
constants.Comment: 19 pages, with 15 postscript figures embedded. Uses REVTEX4 and epsf
macros. Also available at
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~dhv/preprints/sai_pol/index.htm
The polarizability model for ferroelectricity in perovskite oxides
This article reviews the polarizability model and its applications to
ferroelectric perovskite oxides. The motivation for the introduction of the
model is discussed and nonlinear oxygen ion polarizability effects and their
lattice dynamical implementation outlined. While a large part of this work is
dedicated to results obtained within the self-consistent-phonon approximation
(SPA), also nonlinear solutions of the model are handled which are of interest
to the physics of relaxor ferroelectrics, domain wall motions, incommensurate
phase transitions. The main emphasis is to compare the results of the model
with experimental data and to predict novel phenomena.Comment: 55 pages, 35 figure
Nanoscale piezoelectric response across a single antiparallel ferroelectric domain wall
Surprising asymmetry in the local electromechanical response across a single
antiparallel ferroelectric domain wall is reported. Piezoelectric force
microscopy is used to investigate both the in-plane and out-of- plane
electromechanical signals around domain walls in congruent and
near-stoichiometric lithium niobate. The observed asymmetry is shown to have a
strong correlation to crystal stoichiometry, suggesting defect-domain wall
interactions. A defect-dipole model is proposed. Finite element method is used
to simulate the electromechanical processes at the wall and reconstruct the
images. For the near-stoichiometric composition, good agreement is found in
both form and magnitude. Some discrepancy remains between the experimental and
modeling widths of the imaged effects across a wall. This is analyzed from the
perspective of possible electrostatic contributions to the imaging process, as
well as local changes in the material properties in the vicinity of the wall
Force-velocity relation and density profiles for biased diffusion in an adsorbed monolayer
In this paper, which completes our earlier short publication [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 84, 511 (2000)], we study dynamics of a hard-core tracer particle (TP)
performing a biased random walk in an adsorbed monolayer, composed of mobile
hard-core particles undergoing continuous exchanges with a vapor phase. In
terms of an approximate approach, based on the decoupling of the third-order
correlation functions, we obtain the density profiles of the monolayer
particles around the TP and derive the force-velocity relation, determining the
TP terminal velocity, V_{tr}, as the function of the magnitude of external bias
and other system's parameters. Asymptotic forms of the monolayer particles
density profiles at large separations from the TP, and behavior of V_{tr} in
the limit of small external bias are found explicitly.Comment: Latex, 31 pages, 3 figure
Monte Carlo Study of Relaxor Systems: A Minimum Model for Pb(InNb)O}
We examine a simple model for Pb(InNb)O (PIN), which
includes both long-range dipole-dipole interaction and random local anisotropy.
A improved algorithm optimized for long-range interaction has been applied for
efficient large-scale Monte Carlo simulation. We demonstrate that the phase
diagram of PIN is qualitatively reproduced by this minimum model. Some
properties characteristic of relaxors such as nano-scale domain formation, slow
dynamics and dispersive dielectric responses are also examined.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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