| Literature DB >> 36234119 |
Jun Ouyang1, Xianke Wang1, Changtao Shao2, Hongbo Cheng1, Hanfei Zhu1, Yuhang Ren3,4.
Abstract
In our previous work, epitaxial Ba(Zr0.2Ti0.8)O3 thick films (~1-2 μm) showed an excellent energy storage performance with a large recyclable energy density (~58 J/cc) and a high energy efficiency (~92%), which was attributed to a nanoscale entangled heterophase polydomain structure. Here, we propose a detailed analysis of the structure-property relationship in these film materials, using an annealing process to illustrate the effect of nanodomain entanglement on the energy storage performance. It is revealed that an annealing-induced stress relaxation led to the segregation of the nanodomains (via detailed XRD analyses), and a degraded energy storage performance (via polarization-electric field analysis). These results confirm that a nanophase entanglement is an origin of the high-energy storage performance in the Ba(Zr0.2Ti0.8)O3 thick films.Entities:
Keywords: domain structure; ferroelectric films; lead-free; polymorphic phase boundary (PPB); strain engineering
Year: 2022 PMID: 36234119 PMCID: PMC9573558 DOI: 10.3390/ma15196778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1XRD 2θ-scan patterns of (a) the as-grown BZT film (1.25 μm thick); (b) the BZT films annealed at 650 °C and in a pure O2 (1.2 Pa or 10 Pa) atmosphere, in comparison with that of its as-grown state.
Figure 2The room temperature P-E hysteresis loops (a) and leakage current density–voltage curves (b) of the as-grown and annealed BZT films (in 1.2 Pa and 10 Pa O2).
Figure 3XRD pole figures (a,b) using the (a) {002} and (b) {111} diffraction peaks of the as-grown BZT film; (c,d) the split (c) {002}T and (d) {002}R peaks of the annealed BZT film (in 10 Pa O2); (insets: top view of of (a–d)).
Figure 4STEM analysis. Atomic scale HAADF-STEM images from (a) an R phase region and (c) a T phase region of the as-grown BZT film. Corresponding electron diffraction patterns via FFT are shown in (b,d) for the T and R phases, respectively.
Figure 5(a) A high-resolution TEM image of the as-grown BZT film with a <−1 1 0> zone axis near the bottom electrode, (b,c) are an FFT electron diffraction pattern from (a) and a schematic drawing for the diffraction pattern (blue dots: {00l}R phase, red dots: (221)T).