The stabilization of a single domain in free-standing ferroelectric nanocrystals.

J Phys Condens Matter

Department of Chemical Physics, School of Chemistry, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv 69978, Israel.

Published: March 2014

High resolution electron microscopy, electron diffraction and electron holography were used to study individual free-standing ∼ 30 nm barium titanate nanocrystals. Large unidirectional variations in the tetragonal distortion were mapped across the smaller nanocrystals, peaking to anomalously large values of up to 4% at the centers of the nanocrystals. This indicated that the nanocrystals consist of highly strained single ferroelectric domains. Simulations using an effective Hamiltonian for modeling a nanocrystal under a small depolarizing field and negative pressure qualitatively confirm this picture. These simulations, along with the development of a phenomenological model, show that the tetragonal distortion variation is a combined effect of: (i) electrostrictive coupling between the spontaneous polarization and strain inside the nanocrystal, and (ii) a surface-induced effective stress existing inside the nanodot. As a result, a 'strain skin layer', having a smaller tetragonal distortion relative to the core of the nanocrystal, is created.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/26/12/122202DOI Listing

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