| Literature DB >> 35859196 |
Jie Jiang1, Lifu Zhang2, Chen Ming3, Hua Zhou4, Pritom Bose5, Yuwei Guo2, Yang Hu2, Baiwei Wang2, Zhizhong Chen2, Ru Jia2, Saloni Pendse2, Yu Xiang6, Yaobiao Xia6, Zonghuan Lu6, Xixing Wen6, Yao Cai7, Chengliang Sun7, Gwo-Ching Wang6, Toh-Ming Lu6, Daniel Gall2, Yi-Yang Sun3, Nikhil Koratkar2,5, Edwin Fohtung2, Yunfeng Shi8, Jian Shi9,10.
Abstract
Pyroelectricity describes the generation of electricity by temporal temperature change in polar materials1-3. When free-standing pyroelectric materials approach the 2D crystalline limit, how pyroelectricity behaves remained largely unknown. Here, using three model pyroelectric materials whose bonding characters along the out-of-plane direction vary from van der Waals (In2Se3), quasi-van der Waals (CsBiNb2O7) to ionic/covalent (ZnO), we experimentally show the dimensionality effect on pyroelectricity and the relation between lattice dynamics and pyroelectricity. We find that, for all three materials, when the thickness of free-standing sheets becomes small, their pyroelectric coefficients increase rapidly. We show that the material with chemical bonds along the out-of-plane direction exhibits the greatest dimensionality effect. Experimental observations evidence the possible influence of changed phonon dynamics in crystals with reduced thickness on their pyroelectricity. Our findings should stimulate fundamental study on pyroelectricity in ultra-thin materials and inspire technological development for potential pyroelectric applications in thermal imaging and energy harvesting.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35859196 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04850-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504