Piezoelectricity, a fundamental property of perovskite ferroelectrics, endows the materials at the heart of electromechanical systems spanning from macro to micro/nano scales. Defect engineering strategies, particularly involving heterovalent trace impurities and derived vacancies, hold great potential for adjusting piezoelectric performance. Despite the prevalent use of defect engineering for modification, a comprehensive understanding of the specific features that positively impact material properties is still lacking, this knowledge gap impedes the advancement of a universally applicable defect selection and design strategy. In this work, we select perovskite KTaNbO single crystals with orthorhombic phase as the matrix and introduce Fe and Mn elements, which are commonly used in "hard" ferroelectrics as dopants. We investigate how transition-metal doping modifies piezoelectric properties from the perspective of intrinsic polarization behaviors. Interestingly, despite both being doped into the B-site as an acceptor, Mn doping enhances the local structural heterogeneity, greatly bolstering the piezoelectric coefficient beyond 1000 pC/N, whereas Fe doping tends to stabilize the polarization, leading to a substantial improvement in the mechanical quality factor up to 700. This work deciphers the diverse impacts of transition metal impurities on regulating polarization structures and modifying piezoelectric properties, providing a good paradigm for strategically designing perovskite ferroelectrics.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11621366 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54842-6 | DOI Listing |
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