Large Nonclassical Electrostriction in (Y, Nb)-Stabilized δ-Bi2O3

Classical electrostriction, describing a second‐order electromechanical response of insulating solids, scales with elastic compliance, S, and inversely with dielectric susceptibility, ε. This behavior, first noted 20 years ago by Robert Newnham, is shown to apply to a wide range of electrostrictors...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Advanced functional materials Vol. 26; no. 7; pp. 1138 - 1142
Main Authors: Yavo, Nimrod, Smith, Alaric D., Yeheskel, Ori, Cohen, Sydney, Korobko, Roman, Wachtel, Ellen, Slater, Peter R., Lubomirsky, Igor
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 16-02-2016
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Summary:Classical electrostriction, describing a second‐order electromechanical response of insulating solids, scales with elastic compliance, S, and inversely with dielectric susceptibility, ε. This behavior, first noted 20 years ago by Robert Newnham, is shown to apply to a wide range of electrostrictors including polymers, glasses, crystalline linear dielectrics, and relaxor ferroelectrics. Electrostriction in fluorite ceramics of (Y, Nb)‐stabilized δ‐Bi2O3 is examined with 16%–23% vacant oxygen sites. Given the values of compliance and dielectric susceptibility, the electrostriction coefficients are orders of magnitude larger than those expected from Newnham's scaling law. In ambient temperature nanoindentation measurements, (Y, Nb)‐stabilized δ‐Bi2O3 displays primary creep. These findings, which are strikingly similar to those reported for Gd‐doped ceria, support the suggestion that ion conducting ceramics with the fluorite structure, a large concentration of anion vacancies and anelastic behavior, may constitute a previously unknown class of electrostrictors. Classical electrostriction, describing a second‐order electromechanical response of insulating solids, scales with elastic compliance, S, and inversely with dielectric susceptibility, ε. Electrostriction co­efficients for fluorite‐structured ceramics of (Y, Nb)‐stabilized δ‐Bi2O3, with 16%–23% vacant oxygen sites, and Gd‐doped ceria are orders of magnitude larger than those expected from the classical electrostriction scaling law.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-DFP2FS25-G
ArticleID:ADFM201503942
istex:B00BCFE9141E0FCCFFA9F9B837DE0996D6590E6C
ISSN:1616-301X
1616-3028
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201503942