Clamping Enables Enhanced Electromechanical Responses in Antiferroelectric Thin Films

Abstract: 

Thin-film materials with large electromechanical responses are fundamental enablers of next-generation micro-/nano-electromechanical applications. Conventional electromechanical materials (for example, ferroelectrics and relaxors), however, exhibit severely degraded responses when scaled down to submicrometre-thick films due to substrate constraints (clamping). This limitation is overcome, and substantial electromechanical responses in antiferroelectric thin films are achieved through an unconventional coupling of the field-induced antiferroelectric-to-ferroelectric phase transition and the substrate constraints. A detilting of the oxygen octahedra and lattice-volume expansion in all dimensions are observed commensurate with the phase transition using operando electron microscopy, such that the in-plane clamping further enhances the out-of-plane expansion, as rationalized using first-principles calculations. In turn, a non-traditional thickness scaling is realized wherein an electromechanical strain (1.7%) is produced from a model antiferroelectric PbZrO3 film that is just 100 nm thick. The high performance and understanding of the mechanism provide a promising pathway to develop high-performance micro-/nano-electromechanical systems.

Author: 
Pan H
Zhu M
Banyas E
Alaerts L
Acharya M
Zhang H
Kim J
Chen X
Huang X
Xu M
Harris I
Tian Z
Ricci F
Hanrahan B
Spanier JE
Hautier G
LeBeau JM
Neaton JB
Martin LW
Publication date: 
May 23, 2024
Publication type: 
Journal Article