Ferroelectric Materials and Ferroelectricity

Ferroelectric Materials and Ferroelectricity
Author: T. F. Connolly
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 692
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1475706987

This volume is a joint effort of the Research Materials Information Center (RMIC) of the Solid State Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Libraries and Information Systems Center at Bell Telephone Laboratories (BTL) Murray Hill, N. J. The Research Materials Information Center has, since 1963, been answering inquiries on the avail ability, preparation, and properties of inorganic solid-state research materials. The preparation of bibliographies has been essential to this function, and the interest in ferroelectrics led to the compila tion of the journal and report literature on that subject. The 1962 book Ferroelectric Crystals, by Jona and Shirane, was taken as a cutoff point, and all papers through mid-1969 received by the Center have been included. The Libraries and Information Systems Center of BTL has, over a period of years, developed a proprie tary package of computer programs called BELDEX, which formats and generates indexes to biblio graphic material. This group therefore undertook to process RMIC's ferroelectric references by BELDEX so that both laboratories could have the benefit of an indexed basic bibliography in this important research area.

Nanoscale Strontium Titanate Sheets and Crystals

Nanoscale Strontium Titanate Sheets and Crystals
Author: Jack Andrew Tilka
Publisher:
Total Pages: 117
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

The physical properties of materials are dominated by their structure and composition. Insight into the structure of complex oxide materials has the potential to improve our understanding and eventually control of their physical properties. This PhD thesis reports the development of characterization and fabrication techniques relevant to improving the scientific understanding of complex oxide materials. The work presented here has two components. I report a way to use ideas that were originally developed in semiconductor processing to control the elastic strain state and crystallization process of the model complex oxide SrTiO3. An additional component is an important series of advances in the analysis of diffraction patterns acquired with focused x-ray nanobeams. The fabrication and characterization of nanoscale SrTiO3 has been experimentally shown to allow the introduction of elastic strain into SrTiO3. The creation of thin SrTiO3 crystals from (001)-oriented SrTiO3 bulk single crystals using focused ion beam milling techniques yields sheets with submicron thickness and arbitrary orientation within the (001) plane. Synchrotron x-ray nanodiffraction experiments show that the SrTiO3 sheets have rocking curves with angular widths less than 0.02°. These widths are less than a factor of two larger than bulk SrTiO3, which shows that the sheets are suitable substrates for epitaxial thin film growth. A precisely selected elastic strain can be introduced into the SrTiO3 sheets using a silicon nitride stressor layer. Synchrotron x-ray nanodiffraction studies show that the strain introduced in the SrTiO3 sheets is on the order of 10-4, matching the predictions of an elastic model. This approach to elastic strain sharing in complex oxides allows the strain to be selected within a wide and continuous range of values, an effect not achievable in heteroepitaxy on rigid substrates. An additional fabrication technique is also evaluated here based on the crystallization of SrTiO3 from initially amorphous thin films. This process is known as solid-phase epitaxy in two-dimensional samples but is just beginning to be explored in more complex geometries. I report experiments in both homoepitaxy and heteroepitaxy including measurements of crystal growth rates and the crystallographic orientations of crystals formed in this way. The lateral growth rates are consistent with previously measured vertical growth. This result indicated that previous work on vertical solid-phase epitaxy could be extended into lateral solid-phase epitaxy, which has the power to be applied to complicated non-planar geometries. The highly coherent and tightly focused x-ray beams produced by hard x-ray light sources enable the nanoscale structural characterization of materials but are accompanied by significant challenges in the interpretation of diffraction and scattering patterns. I report here a series of methods that expand the range of physical problems that can be accurately captured by coherent x-ray optical simulations. My approach has been to expand simulations methods to include arbitrary x-ray incident angles and arbitrary epitaxial heterostructures. I first applied these methods to extract the misorientation of lattice planes and the strain of individual layers of Si/SiGe heterostructures relevant to applications in quantum electronics. Further applications reported in this thesis are in probing defects created in the processing of SrTiO3 and in measuring the change in lattice parameter introduced into strained SrTiO3 sheets. The systematic interpretation of nanobeam diffraction patterns aids in the fabrication of SrTiO3 nanostructures.

Electroceramics in Japan XIV

Electroceramics in Japan XIV
Author: Chazono Hirokazu
Publisher: Trans Tech Publications Ltd
Total Pages: 343
Release: 2011-07-04
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3038135054

Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters CPCI-S (WoS). The major topics covered by this special collection include dielectrics, piezoelectric ceramics, ferroelectrics, lead-free piezoelectric ceramics, Li-ion battery-related materials, secondary batteries, solid oxide fuel cells, dye-sensitized solar cells, the properties and processing of thin films, magnetic ceramics, semiconducting ceramics, sensors and ceramic science and processing. The microstructures of the materials considered also ranged from single crystals to bulk ceramics, to thin films and finally to nanocrystals; thus providing a complete overview of the subject.

Phononic and Electronic Excitations in Complex Oxides Studied with Advanced Infrared and Raman Spectroscopy Techniques

Phononic and Electronic Excitations in Complex Oxides Studied with Advanced Infrared and Raman Spectroscopy Techniques
Author: Fryderyk Lyzwa
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 158
Release: 2022-10-05
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3031118669

This PhD thesis reports on investigations of several oxide-based materials using advanced infrared and Raman spectroscopy techniques and in combination with external stimuli such as high magnetic or electric field, sptial confinement in thin film heterostructures and the radiation with UV light. This leads to new results in the fields of superconductivity, electronic polarization states and nanoscale phenomena. Among these, the observation of anomalous polar moments is of great relevance for understanding the electric-field-induced metal-to-insulator transistion; and the demonstration that confocal Raman spectroscopy of backfolded acoustic photons in metal-oxide multilayers can be used as a powerful characterization tool for monitoring their interface properties and layer thickness is an important technical development for the engineering of such functional oxide heterostructures.

Defects and Magnetic Properties of Iron-implanted Strontium Titanate and Thin Fims[i.e] Films

Defects and Magnetic Properties of Iron-implanted Strontium Titanate and Thin Fims[i.e] Films
Author: Misha Chavarha
Publisher:
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

Physical vapor deposition was used to grow good quality crystalline stoichiometric SrTiO3 thin films on Si(001) substrates using a systematic approach starting from an understanding of the kinetics and thermodynamics of the system and finishing with the development of a procedure for preparing high quality SrTiO3/Si interface. Growth of optimized SrTiO3 perovskite structures on Si requires careful transformation of a thin interfacial SrSix layer into the initial SrTiO3 lattice cells. The critical aspects of the growth, such as low temperature and low oxidant partial pressure, are identified. Crystallinity and stoichiometry of SrTiO3 were verified using powder x-ray diffraction (XRD) and Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy (RBS). The SrTiO3/Si(001) interface was examined with X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) and RBS. The optimum composition can be represented with low concentration (thickness) of strontium silicate phases at the interface (SrxSiyOy) as well as a strong signal from strontium titanate peaks. Thicker samples were grown with the procedure developed and were implanted with iron at 2 ́1016 ions/cm2 for future magnetic characterization. In parallel to the thin film growth, (001) SrTiO3 single crystals were implanted with iron at doses ranging from 2 ́1014 to 2 ́1016 ions/cm2 and magnetic measurements were carried out with a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID). The results show negative susceptibility, predominately diamagnetic behavior which is characteristic of SrTiO3 and small paramagnetic response at low magnetic fields, indicating the possible presence of oxygen/titanium vacancies. The temperature dependence of magnetization measurements did not reveal phase changes. We note that it was difficult to identify any trends between implanted samples most likely due to oxygen contamination of the measurement system. Future experiments are proposed to develop a quantitative and consistent agreement between Fe phases in SrTiO3, SrTiO3 defect concentrations and magnetic responses.

JJAP

JJAP
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 660
Release: 2002
Genre: Engineering
ISBN: