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The Muppet’s Guide to: The Structure and Dynamics of Solids 3. Ferroelectricity and Phase Transitions

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The Muppet’s Guide to:. The Structure and Dynamics of Solids. 3. Ferroelectricity and Phase Transitions. Perovskites – ABO 3. Classic example – Ba Ti O 3 which exhibits ferroelectricity. Ba Ti O 3. B (Ti) sits inside an octahedral cage of Oxygens. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Muppet’s Guide to:

The Muppet’s Guide to:The Structure and Dynamics of Solids

3. Ferroelectricity and Phase Transitions

Page 2: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Perovskites – ABO3

Classic example – BaTiO3 which exhibits ferroelectricity

Figure adapted from Callister, Materials science and engineering, 7 th Ed.http://www.camsoft.co.kr

B (Ti) sits inside an octahedral cage of Oxygens

BaTiO3

Page 3: The Muppet’s Guide to:

web.uniovi.es/qcg/vlc/luana.htm

SrTiO3

Ti OSr

Sr2+ O2-Ti4+

Page 4: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Ideal Perovskite Structures

http://www.camsoft.co.kr

ABO3

a

A

B

O

B sites are octahedrally bonded by oxygens

For an undistorted cube:

2

2

2

A O

B O

O O

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SrTiO3

Page 5: The Muppet’s Guide to:

G H TS

Low Temp Minimum G when H is at optimum valueU stabilised by bonding

Low Temp, TS < H Minimise enthalpy

High Temp, TS > H Maximise entropy

G H

G S

ThermodynamicsStrain Energy vs. Bonding Energy

Medium Temp Thermal motion of the atoms relaxes bonding requirements. Reducing strain in the underlying lattice becomes the dominant energy term.

Page 6: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Displacive Phase Transitions

A

B

O

Ionic radii never match ideal cubic requirements.

A site atoms smaller than hole:

In displacive phase transitions the atoms only change position slightly.

Distortion of octahedra

Page 7: The Muppet’s Guide to:

LaMnO3

Most perovskite structures are distorted due to the ionic radii of

the cations and distortions caused by the local crystal fields

and electron interactions

- Temperature Dependent

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, Research Highlights, 2001

Structural changes can induce other phenomena

Page 8: The Muppet’s Guide to:

web.uniovi.es/qcg/vlc/luana.html

SrTiO3 - Tc=105KAntiferrodistortive transition – unit cell doubled

Page 9: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Displacive TransitionsBaTiO3

Centrosymmetric

Non-centrosymmetric

Page 10: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Ferroelectricity in Perovskites

http://www.iue.tuwien.ac.at/phd/dragosits/node12.html

Classic example is Barium Titanate. Tc=393K, motion of atoms 0.1Å

Which breaks the local symmetry. Permanent structural change.

CUBIC TETRAGONAL

Page 11: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Ferroelectricity in Perovskites

CUBIC TETRAGONAL

Page 12: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Tetragonally Distorted Perovskites

Page 13: The Muppet’s Guide to:

PiezoelectricityOnly possible in solids which lack a centre of inversion (20 of 32 point groups satisfy this)

,ijk jk

j k

P d jk ijk ii

e d Edijk is the

piezoelectic constant (3rd rank tensor)

Page 14: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Piezoelectric Effect in Perovskites

Movement of central atom breaks the point

symmetry at the centre

– now has no centre of symmetry

Piezoelectric effect

Page 15: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Piezoelectric Effect

Electrical analogue to Magnetism

Spins or Dipoles

Ionic crystals can become polarised when subjected to an elastic strain

Electric field causes strain and hence a change in lattice parameter

Electrostriction – an analogue of magnetostriction

http://metwww.epfl.ch/Brillouin/images/Electrostriction.gif

Long range order of electric dipoles

Page 16: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Piezo Actuators

Page 17: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Ferroelectric Transition

Ordered state where dipoles are aligned without the need for external stress of fields.

Disordered state where dipoles can only be aligned by application of stress due to an electric field

Page 18: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Ferroelectric Hysteresis Loop

Ferroelectric materials can be reversed

from ±Ps using suitable applied electric fields.

If reversal field (Ec) is greater than the breakdown field of the material it is pyroelectric (LaNbO3 and LaTaO3 are examples)

-Ec

Page 19: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Phase Transitions

• The change from one state (or phase) or another is associated with a phase transition and a critical point.

• In this example it is a structural phase transition that occurs abruptly at a critical temperature, Tc.

Page 20: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Phase Transition

phase phase

Tc

Temperature

Fre

e E

ner

gy

At the phase transition the Gibbs free energy of the two states is identical

G H TS

ORDERED DISORDERED

Page 21: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Describing Phase TransitionsOrdering Parameter, h: This is the parameter which shows a change at the transition temperature or pressure.

Order parameter is a derivative of the Gibbs free energy with respect to a thermodynamic variable

G

densityChemical potential

G

magnetisation mH

Applied Field

Page 22: The Muppet’s Guide to:

1st Order Phase TransitionsEhrenfest classification:

Discontinuity in the 1st derivative of Gibbs free energy

Transitions that exhibit LATENT HEAT

– Energy must be supplied to change the local environment. This results in no temperature change.

Discontinuity in

Page 23: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Boiling Water

First-order transitions are associated with "mixed-phase regimes"

Some parts of the system have completed the transition whilst others have not.

Water does not instantly change from liquid to gas. Instead it forms a mixture of water and steam bubbles. Similarly it does not instantly freeze.

Page 24: The Muppet’s Guide to:
Page 25: The Muppet’s Guide to:

First Order

Transitions in liquid crystals

Discontinuity

h

Page 26: The Muppet’s Guide to:

Phase Transitions…

BaTiO3:

Volume change at Tc

Thus expect first order phase change with discontinuity in Ps at Tc

LaTaO3 shows second order phase transition