Diffuse Neutron Scattering Study of Relaxor Ferroelectric (1-x)Pb(Zn1/3Nb2/3)O3-xPbTiO3(PZN-xPT)
D. La-Orauttapong, J. Toulouse, Z.-G. Ye, R. Erwin, J.L. Robertson,, and W. Chen

TL;DR
This study uses diffuse neutron scattering to analyze the size, orientation, and temperature-dependent behavior of polar nanoregions in relaxor ferroelectrics PZN and PZN-xPT, revealing insights into their dynamic and static polarization states.
Contribution
It provides new diffuse scattering data on PZN and PZN-xPT, identifying temperature regions of polarization dynamics and the effects of PT addition on nanoregion orientation and condensation temperature.
Findings
Diffuse scattering peaks fit with Lorentzian functions to extract correlation lengths.
Correlation length increases with decreasing temperature, following Curie-Weiss law initially.
PT addition broadens diffuse scattering and raises the nanoregion condensation temperature.
Abstract
Diffuse neutron scattering is a valuable tool to obtain information about the size and orientation of the polar nanoregions that are a characteristic feature of relaxor ferroelectrics. In this paper, we present new diffuse scattering results obtained on Pb(Zn1/3Nb2/3)O3 (PZN for short) and (1-x)Pb(Zn1/3Nb2/3)O3-xPbTiO3(PZN-xPT)single crystals (with x=4.5 and 9%), around various Bragg reflections and along three symmetry directions in the [100]-[011] zone. Diffuse scattering is observed around reflections with mixed indices, (100), (011) and (300), and along transverse and diagonal directions only. No diffuse scattering is found in longitudinal scans. The diffuse scattering peaks can be fitted well with a Lorentzian function, from which a correlation length is extracted. The correlation length increases with decreasing temperatures down to the transition at Tc, first following a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
