Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Induced giant piezoelectricity in centrosymmetric oxides

150

Citations

35

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Piezoelectrics are materials that linearly deform in response to an applied electric field. As a fundamental prerequisite, piezoelectric materials must have a noncentrosymmetric crystal structure. For more than a century, this has remained a major obstacle for finding piezoelectric materials. We circumvented this limitation by breaking the crystallographic symmetry and inducing large and sustainable piezoelectric effects in centrosymmetric materials by the electric field-induced rearrangement of oxygen vacancies. Our results show the generation of extraordinarily large piezoelectric responses [with piezoelectric strain coefficients (<i>d</i><sub>33</sub>) of ~200,000 picometers per volt at millihertz frequencies] in cubic fluorite gadolinium-doped CeO<sub>2-</sub><i><sub>x</sub></i> films, which are two orders of magnitude larger than the responses observed in the presently best-known lead-based piezoelectric relaxor-ferroelectric oxide at kilohertz frequencies. These findings provide opportunities to design piezoelectric materials from environmentally friendly centrosymmetric ones.

References

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