LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

In Situ Observation of Point‐Defect‐Induced Unit‐Cell‐Wise Energy Storage Pathway in Antiferroelectric PbZrO 3

Photo from wikipedia

Phase transition is established to govern electrostatic energy storage for antiferroelectric (AFE)-type dielectric capacitors. However, the source of inducing the phase transition and the pathway of storing the energy remains… Click to show full abstract

Phase transition is established to govern electrostatic energy storage for antiferroelectric (AFE)-type dielectric capacitors. However, the source of inducing the phase transition and the pathway of storing the energy remains elusive so far given the ultrafast charging/discharging process under normal working conditions. Here, by slowing down the phase-transition speed using electronbeam irradiation as an external stimulus, the in situ dynamic energy-storage process in AFE PbZrO3 is captured by using atomic-resolution transmission electron microscopy. Specifically, it is found that oxygen-lead-vacancy-induced defect core acts as a seed to initiate the antiferrodistortive-to-ferrodistortive transition in antiparallel-Pb-based structural frames. Associated with polarity evolution of the compressively strained defect core, the ferroelectric (FE)– ferrodistortive state expands bilaterally along the b-axis direction and then develops into charged domain configurations during the energy-storage process, which is further evidenced by observations at the ordinary FE states. With filling the gap of perception, the findings here provide a straightforward approach of unveiling the unit-cell-wise energy storage pathway in chemical defect-engineered dielectric ceramics.

Keywords: energy; energy storage; wise energy; cell wise; unit cell

Journal Title: Advanced Functional Materials
Year Published: 2021

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.