Nature Communications (Jan 2025)

Enhanced non-classical electrostriction in strained tetragonal ceria

  • Simone Santucci,
  • Milica Vasiljevic,
  • Haiwu Zhang,
  • Victor Buratto Tinti,
  • Achilles Bergne,
  • Armando A. Morin-Martinez,
  • Sandeep Kumar Chaluvadi,
  • Pasquale Orgiani,
  • Simone Sanna,
  • Anton Lyksborg-Andersen,
  • Thomas Willum Hansen,
  • Ivano E. Castelli,
  • Nini Pryds,
  • Vincenzo Esposito

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55393-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Electrostriction is the upsurge of strain under an electric field in any dielectric material. Oxygen-defective metal oxides, such as acceptor-doped ceria, exhibit high electrostriction 10-17 m2V-2 values, which can be further enhanced via interface engineering at the nanoscale. This effect in ceria is “non-classical” as it arises from an intricate relation between defect-induced polarisation and local elastic distortion in the lattice. Here, we investigate the impact of mismatch strain when epitaxial Gd-doped CeO2 thin films are grown on various single-crystal substrates. We demonstrate that varying the compressive and tensile strain can fine-tune the electromechanical response. The electrostriction coefficients achieve a large M 11 ≈ 3.6·10-15 m2V-2 in lattices of in-plane compressed films, i.e., a positive tetragonality (c/a-1 > 0), with stress above 3 GPa at the film/substrate interface. Chemical and structural analysis suggests that the high electrostriction stems from anisotropic distortions in the local lattice strain, which lead to constructively oriented elastic dipoles and Ce3+ electronic defects.