Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Giant electrostriction-like response from defective non-ferroelectric epitaxial BaTiO3 integrated on Si (100)

  • Shubham Kumar Parate,
  • Sandeep Vura,
  • Subhajit Pal,
  • Upanya Khandelwal,
  • Rama Satya Sandilya Ventrapragada,
  • Rajeev Kumar Rai,
  • Sri Harsha Molleti,
  • Vishnu Kumar,
  • Girish Patil,
  • Mudit Jain,
  • Ambresh Mallya,
  • Majid Ahmadi,
  • Bart Kooi,
  • Sushobhan Avasthi,
  • Rajeev Ranjan,
  • Srinivasan Raghavan,
  • Saurabh Chandorkar,
  • Pavan Nukala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45903-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Lead-free, silicon compatible materials showing large electromechanical responses comparable to, or better than conventional relaxor ferroelectrics, are desirable for various nanoelectromechanical devices and applications. Defect-engineered electrostriction has recently been gaining popularity to obtain enhanced electromechanical responses at sub 100 Hz frequencies. Here, we report record values of electrostrictive strain coefficients (M 31 ) at frequencies as large as 5 kHz (1.04×10−14 m2/V2 at 1 kHz, and 3.87×10−15 m2/V2 at 5 kHz) using A-site and oxygen-deficient barium titanate thin-films, epitaxially integrated onto Si. The effect is robust and retained upon cycling upto 6 million times. Our perovskite films are non-ferroelectric, exhibit a different symmetry compared to stoichiometric BaTiO3 and are characterized by twin boundaries and nano polar-like regions. We show that the dielectric relaxation arising from the defect-induced features correlates well with the observed giant electrostriction-like response. These films show large coefficient of thermal expansion (2.36 × 10−5/K), which along with the giant M 31 implies a considerable increase in the lattice anharmonicity induced by the defects. Our work provides a crucial step forward towards formulating guidelines to engineer large electromechanical responses even at higher frequencies in lead-free thin films.