| Literature DB >> 31683682 |
Alexander Semenov1, Antonina Dedyk2, Ivan Mylnikov3, Oleg Pakhomov4, Andrey Es'kov5, Alexander Anokhin6,7, Vasiliy Krylov8, Anton Burovikhin9, Yulia Pavlova10, Alexander Tselev11,12, Andrei Kholkin13,14,15.
Abstract
Multiferroic materialsare widely used in microelectronics because they are sensitive to elastic, magnetic, and electric fields and there is an intrinsic coupling between them. In particular, transition metal-doped BaTiO3 is consideredas a viable multiferroic because of the simultaneous presence of ferroelectricity and magnetism.In this work, we study the electrical and thermal properties of Mn-doped BaTiO3 ceramics that can be used for multicaloric applications. We found that Mn doping leads to the broadening and shifting of the phase transition accompanied with simultaneous decrease of latent heat and entropy. Mn doping causes a decrease in the bulk resistivity while contact resistance remains intact. Doped ceramics can withstand high electric fields(up to 40 kV/cm) and exhibit linear I-V characteristics followed by the Schottkylimited current in contrast to earlier observations. As such, these ceramics are promising for multicaloric applications.Entities:
Keywords: BaTiO3; electrocalorics; magnetocalorics; phase transition; specific heat
Year: 2019 PMID: 31683682 PMCID: PMC6862048 DOI: 10.3390/ma12213592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Phases in the investigated samples.
| Sample | Main Phases | Mn Content |
|---|---|---|
| BTO | Tetragonal phase BaTiO3 | - |
| BTO+5Mn | Tetragonal phase BaTiO3 | Ba(Mn0.02Ti0.98)O3 |
| BTO+10Mn | Tetragonal phase BaTiO3 | Ba(Mn0.03Ti0.97)O3 |
Figure 1(a) Topography and (b) piezoresponse force microscopy image (amplitude) of BTO+5Mn ceramics demonstrating inhomogeneous polarization distribution. The image size is 5 × 5 µm2.
Figure 2Temperature dependences of the effective dielectric permittivity of pure BTO ceramics (blue curve) in comparison with that of Mn-doped samples. Much lower values of the permittivity in BTO-5Mn (black curve) and BTO-10Mn (red curve) are due to non-ferroelectric grains of the second phases.
Figure 3Specific heat capacity in pure BTO ceramics (blue curve) in comparison that of Mn-doped samples. The inset shows the Cp in heating and cooling cycles for lightly doped BTO (5% Mn).
Figure 4Current density of the platelet capacitors of BTO+10Mn ceramics. The evaluation of the bulk and contact resistance was done based on linear fit (black solid lines).
Figure 5Total resistance times surface area of BTO+10Mn ceramics as a function of the thickness of ceramic discs. The intersection with the ordinate axis yields the contact resistance of the sample.
Curie–Weiss constant K, transition temperature Tc, density ρ, excess heat ΔQ, entropy change ΔS, remanent polarization P, and resistance R in pure BTO, Mn-doped BTO, and BTO single crystals.
| Composition of Ceramic Samples | K, K | Tc, K | ρ, kg/m3 | ΔQ, J/kg | ΔS, J/kg·K | P, C/cm2 | R, Ω |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BTO | 0.88 × 105 | 407.7 | 5.65 × 103 | 584 | 1.434 | 11.2 × 10−6 | 1012 |
| BTO+5M | 0.8 × 104 | 397 | 5.05 × 103 | 246 | 0.620 | 2.1 × 10−6 | 4 × 1010 |
| BTO+10M | 0.15 × 105 | 395 | 4.65 × 103 | 258 | 0.653 | 2.83 × 10−6 | 2.4 × 1011 |
| BaTiO3 single crystal [ | 401 | 899 | 2.24 | (16 − 24) × 10−6 | |||
| BaTiO3 single crystal [ | 1.7 × 105 | 6.02 × 103 | 2.15 | 20 × 10−6 |