Topological phase transformations and intrinsic size effects in ferroelectric nanoparticles.

Nanoscale

Center for Hierarchical Material Design, Northwestern-Argonne Institute of Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA. and Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL, USA.

Published: January 2017

Composite materials comprised of ferroelectric nanoparticles in a dielectric matrix are being actively investigated for a variety of functional properties attractive for a wide range of novel electronic and energy harvesting devices. However, the dependence of these functionalities on shapes, sizes, orientation and mutual arrangement of ferroelectric particles is currently not fully understood. In this study, we utilize a time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau approach combined with coupled-physics finite-element-method based simulations to elucidate the behavior of polarization in isolated spherical PbTiO or BaTiO nanoparticles embedded in a dielectric medium, including air. The equilibrium polarization topology is strongly affected by particle diameter, as well as the choice of inclusion and matrix materials, with monodomain, vortex-like and multidomain patterns emerging for various combinations of size and materials parameters. This leads to radically different polarization vs. electric field responses, resulting in highly tunable size-dependent dielectric properties that should be possible to observe experimentally. Our calculations show that there is a critical particle size below which ferroelectricity vanishes. For the PbTiO particle, this size is 2 and 3.4 nm, respectively, for high- and low-permittivity media. For the BaTiO particle, it is ∼3.6 nm regardless of the medium dielectric strength.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c6nr09111cDOI Listing

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