Lecture 14 Electroceramics
Lecture 14 Electroceramics
Lecture 14 Electroceramics
Electro-ceramics
S.B. Majumder
Materials Science Center
IIT Kharagpur- 721302
Insulating Oxide Electronic Materials
p = q⋅x
Polarization
p q
P= ≡ displacement of the e- cloud with respect
V A to the core due to external bias, occurs in
ALL dielectric materials
Ferroelectrics
Lead P Filters Oscillators
Oxygen +P E
Titanium
+P R
1 EC
0 E
-P R
Ferroelectric
or Wireless Communications Memories
-P E
Perovskite Structure
Typical Perovskite
Ferroelectrics
•Pb(Zr,Ti)O3-PZT
•Ba(Sr,Ti)O3-BST
•KNbO3 and LiNbO3
•Pb(Ca,Ti)O3 -PCT
•Pb(Sr,Ti)O3 –PST
•Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-PbTiO3
Properties
Spontaneous polarization in the absence applied electrical field.
Extremely high dielectric constant (~500-15,000).
Strong non-linear dielectric response to an applied electrical field.
High strain response to applied electrical field piezoelectricity
Strong variation in polarization with temperature pyroelectricity
Some Important Definitions
D: electrical displacement
ε: dielectric constant
E: electrical field
Ec: coercive field
dijk: piezoelectric coefficient (third rank tensor)
p: pyroelectric coefficient
Qijkl: electrostrictive coefficient (fourth rank tensor)
D = PS + Eε
Spontaneous Polarization and the Hysteresis
Dielectric Constant: Slope of the P vs. E curve
Pi = ε 0ε ij E j
1200 2500
Dielectric constant ε33/ε0
800 1500
600 1000
400 500
200 0
-300 -200 -100 0 100 200 300 -100 -75 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100
Electric Field, E3 [kV/cm] Electric Field, E3 [kV/cm]
Paraelectric Ferroelectric
0.6
P
TC=490oC
0.5
E>>0
E=0
0.4
PbTiO3 T
0.3
0 100 200 300 400 500
Temperature [oC]
∂D ∂P ∂ε
PYROELECTRICITY p= = S +E
∂T E ∂T ∂T
Ferroelectric used as Pyroelectric material
Polarization
Tc Exceptional Pyroelectric
Temperature
Response
Volts
∂D ∂P ∂ε
PYROELECTRICITY p= = S +E
∂T E ∂T ∂T
Electrostriction: Coupling between Polarization and Self-Strain
0.415
c aT − aC
= Q12 P02
0.410
u1 = u2 =
Lattice Parameter [nm]
TC=490oC aC
0.405
cT − aC
u3 = = Q11P02
0.400
aC
0.395 a0 u4 = u5 = u6 = 0.
xij = d kij E k
Strain due to combined Electrostrictive and Piezoelectric effect
ε0
kij ki
E=0
E>0
E≈EC
Polarization Switching by an Electric Field
0.404
0.403
0.401
0.400
0.399
0.398
R3m Amm2 P4mm Pm3m
-200 -100 0 100 200 300
Temperature (oC)
Applications of Ferroelectrics
Smart cards use ferroelectric memories. They can hold relatively large amounts of information
and do not wear out from use, as magnetic strips do, because they use contactless radio
frequency input/output. These cards are the size and shape of credit cards but contain
ferroelectric memory that can carry substantial information, such as its bearer's medical history
for use by doctors, pharmacists and even paramedics in an emergency. Current smart cards
carry about 250 kilobytes of memory.
Dynamic RAMs (capacitors)
High dielectric constant near phase transformation from the cubic to the
tetragonal phase (500~15,000)
Tetragonal Cubic
∆ε
tunability = Φ =
2500
2000
ε (E = 0)
1500
∆ε
1000
500
Filters Oscillators
0 ε(E=0)
-100 -75 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100
Phase Delay
shifters lines
Pyroelectric Detectors/Sensors
Piezoelectric Sensors/Actuators, MEMS
Piezoelectric Sensors/Actuators, MEMS
Piezoelectric Sensors/Actuators, MEMS