Self-Assembled Epitaxial Ferroelectric Oxide Nanospring with Super-Scalability.

Adv Mater

The Electronic Materials Research Laboratory, Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education & International Center for Dielectric Research, School of Electronic Science and Engineering, State Key Laboratory for Manufacturing Systems Engineering, the International Joint Laboratory for Micro/Nano Manufacturing and Measurement Technology, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, 710049, China.

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Oxide nanosprings are gaining attention for their unique properties like anticorrosion, high-temperature tolerance, and mechanical response, which make them useful in applications such as sensors and energy harvesters.
  • - A new method for creating these nanosprings involves self-assembly using a layer of La Sr MnO/BaTiO, allowing for nanosprings that can stretch and compress without breaking, showcasing impressive scalability and resilience.
  • - The study reveals that the resilience and scalability of these nanosprings come from their unique ferroelastic domain structures, leading to minimal plastic deformation and opening up new possibilities for developing functional nanosprings.

Article Abstract

Oxide nanosprings have attracted many research interests because of their anticorrosion, high-temperature tolerance, oxidation resistance, and enhanced-mechanic-response from unique helix structures, enabling various applications like nanomanipulators, nanomotors, nanoswitches, sensors, and energy harvesters. However, preparing oxide nanosprings is a challenge for their intrinsic lack of elasticity. Here, an approach for preparing self-assembled, epitaxial, ferroelectric nanosprings with built-in strain due to the lattice mismatch in freestanding La Sr MnO /BaTiO (LSMO/BTO) bilayer heterostructures is developed. It is found that these LSMO/BTO nanosprings can be extensively pulled or pushed up to their geometrical limits back and forth without breaking, exhibiting super-scalability with full recovery capability. The phase-field simulations reveal that the excellent scalability originates from the continuous ferroelastic domain structures, resulting from twisting under co-existing axial and shear strains. In addition, the oxide heterostructural springs exhibit strong resilience due to the limited plastic deformation nature and the built-in strain between the bilayers. This discovery provides an alternative way for preparing and operating functional oxide nanosprings that can be applied to various technologies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202108419DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oxide nanosprings
12
self-assembled epitaxial
8
epitaxial ferroelectric
8
built-in strain
8
oxide
5
nanosprings
5
ferroelectric oxide
4
oxide nanospring
4
nanospring super-scalability
4
super-scalability oxide
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!