All dielectrics exhibit electrostriction,i.e.,display a quadratic strain response to an electric field compared to the linear strain dependence of piezoelectrics.As such,there is significant interest in discovering ne...All dielectrics exhibit electrostriction,i.e.,display a quadratic strain response to an electric field compared to the linear strain dependence of piezoelectrics.As such,there is significant interest in discovering new electrostrictors with enhanced electrostrictive coefficients,especially as electrostrictors can exhibit effective piezoelectricity when a bias electric field is applied.We present the results of a study combining data mining and first-principles computations that indicate that there exists a group of iodides,bromides,and chlorides that have electrostrictive coefficients exceeding 10 m^(4)C^(–2)which are substantially higher than typical oxide electrostrictive ceramics and polymers.The corresponding effective piezoelectric voltage coefficients are three orders of magnitude larger than lead zirconate titanate.展开更多
基金Authors A.G.,S.K.N.,and S.P.A.thank the Air Force Research Laboratory,Materials and Manufacturing Directorate(AFRL/RXMS)for support via Contract No.FA8650-18-C-5700J.Y.and P.E.J.have been supported by the ANR-19-ASTR-0024-01 and ANR-20-CE08-0012-1 grants.
文摘All dielectrics exhibit electrostriction,i.e.,display a quadratic strain response to an electric field compared to the linear strain dependence of piezoelectrics.As such,there is significant interest in discovering new electrostrictors with enhanced electrostrictive coefficients,especially as electrostrictors can exhibit effective piezoelectricity when a bias electric field is applied.We present the results of a study combining data mining and first-principles computations that indicate that there exists a group of iodides,bromides,and chlorides that have electrostrictive coefficients exceeding 10 m^(4)C^(–2)which are substantially higher than typical oxide electrostrictive ceramics and polymers.The corresponding effective piezoelectric voltage coefficients are three orders of magnitude larger than lead zirconate titanate.