Flexocoupling impact on the size effects of piezo- response and conductance in mixed-type ferroelectrics-semiconductors under applied pressure
Anna N. Morozovska, Eugene A. Eliseev, Yuri A. Genenko, Ivan S., Vorotiahin, Maxim V. Silibin, Ye Cao, Yunseok Kim, Maya D. Glinchuk, and, Sergei V. Kalinin

TL;DR
This study investigates how flexocoupling and external pressure influence size-dependent properties like polarization, piezo-response, and conductance in ferroelectric semiconductor thin films, revealing pressure-induced phase transition suppression and resistive switching.
Contribution
The paper provides a self-consistent analysis of flexocoupling effects on size-dependent properties under pressure, highlighting the suppression of phase transitions and emergence of electret-like states.
Findings
Flexocoupling significantly alters size effects under pressure.
Pressure can suppress phase transitions at critical thickness.
Electron concentration changes enable resistive switching.
Abstract
Flexocoupling impact on the size effects of the spontaneous polarization, effective piezo-response, elastic strain and compliance, carrier concentration and piezo-conductance have been calculated in thin films of ferroelectric semiconductors with mixed-type conductivity under applied pressure. Analysis of the self-consistent calculation results revealed that the thickness dependences of aforementioned physical quantities, calculated at zero and nonzero flexoelectric couplings, are very similar under zero applied pressure, but become strongly different under the application of external pressure pext. At that the differences become noticeably stronger for the film surface under compression than under tension. The impact of the Vegard mechanism on the size effects is weaker in comparison with flexocoupling except for the thickness dependence of the piezo-conductance. Without flexoelectric…
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