Length-scale dependent average structures, piezoelectricity enhancement and depolarization mechanisms in a non-MPB high-performance piezoelectric alloy system PbTiO3-Bi(Zr1/2Ni1/2)O3
Rishikesh Pandey, Dipak Kumar Khatua, Shekhar Tyagi, Mulualem Abebe,, Bastola Narayan, Vasant Sathe, Rajeev Ranjan

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that high piezoelectric response can be achieved in non-MPB alloy systems, specifically PT-BNZ, through domain wall mobility and phase coexistence, challenging the traditional belief that MPB tuning is essential.
Contribution
The paper reveals that large piezoelectricity in PT-BNZ arises from domain wall mobility and phase coexistence, not from inter-ferroelectric instability or MPB proximity.
Findings
High piezoelectric response in PT-BNZ without MPB.
Poling irreversibly suppresses cubic-like phase.
Enhanced domain wall mobility drives piezoelectricity.
Abstract
There is a general perception that large piezoelectric response in ferroelectric alloys requires tuning the system towards a morphotropic phase boundary (MPB), i.e., a composition driven inter-ferroelectric instability. Here we show that high piezoelectric response can be realized even in non-MPB alloy systems. This is demonstrated on (1-x)PbTiO3-(x)Bi(Zr0.5Ni0.5)O3 (PT-BNZ) by a comprehensive study involving electric-field and temperature dependent XRD, Raman spectroscopy, dielectric, piezoelectric and high field electrostrain measurements. We found that poling-field irreversibly suppresses the cubic-like phase at room temperature. Based on our results, we argue that that which appears as MPB, comprising of tetragonal and cubic-like phases on the global scale, is not so actually. The large piezoresponse is due to coexistence of tetragonal regions of long and short-range coherence. The…
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