Abstract
Piezoelectric ceramics serve as essential materials for electromechanical transduction; however, they face two critical limitations: the environmental toxicity associated with conventional lead-based systems and the inadequate strain performance, typically below 0.5%, observes in current lead-free alternatives. In this work, a synergistic design approach is presented to address both challenges by simultaneously modulating the room-temperature nonergodic relaxor to ergodic relaxor phase boundary and introducing engineered defect dipoles (Pd) in (Bi0.5Na0.5)0.93Ba0.07TiO3 (BNBT) ceramics through B-site co-substitution with aliovalent (Sn0.5Sb0.4)4+ complex ions. This dual-modulation strategy leverages field-induced phase transitions, the morphotropic phase boundary effect, and the cooperative alignment between spontaneous polarization and defect dipole polarization. As a result, the material system exhibits markedly suppressed negative strain, a substantial internal bias field that facilitates reversible domain switching, and an exceptional electromechanical response. Specifically, an ultrahigh electrostrain of 1.06%, a giant effective piezoelectric coefficient of 1317 pm V−1, and an ultralow strain hysteresis of 7.2% are achieved. These metrics rival those of benchmark lead-based ceramics such as Pb(Zr1-xTix)O3. The proposed methodology offers a promising pathway for the development of high-performance, environmentally benign actuator materials suitable for advanced electromechanical applications.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Advanced Functional Materials |
| DOIs | |
| State | Accepted/In press - 2025 |
Keywords
- BNT
- defect engineering
- electrostrain
- lead-free ceramics
- phase boundary
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Synergistic Phase Boundary and Defect Engineering Enables Ultrahigh Electrostrain in Lead-Free Ceramics'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Cite this
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver