Ultra-high piezoelectric properties and labyrinthine-domain structure in (K,Na)(Ta,Nb)O3 with phase boundaries†
Abstract
(K,Na)NbO3-based materials exhibit high potential for applications in electronic devices. Generally, to improve piezoelectric properties to meet the requirements of applications, a polymorphic phase transition boundary is required. However, because of the difficulty in growing potassium sodium niobate-based single crystals, with which the intrinsic characteristics of the material system can be best investigated, there are few studies on the origin of the high performance. Here, a KNTN single crystal with K/Na and Ta/Nb composition gradients was grown successfully via the top-seed solution growth method. Samples with compositions of K0.41Na0.59Ta0.41Nb0.59O3 (KNTN41), K0.49Na0.51Ta0.34Nb0.66O3 (KNTN34), and K0.59Na0.41Ta0.28Nb0.72O3 (KNTN28) were cut along the (001)PC direction. The KNTN41 sample exhibited an excellent piezoelectric coefficient (d33 = 565 pC Nā1), which originated from the domain density observed via a polarized light microscope. In addition, the local domain patterns of the three samples observed via a piezoresponse force microscope exhibit different characteristics. In KNTN41 with a PPT boundary, the domain construction exhibits a labyrinthine-domain structure, whose high domain activity is the origin of its high piezoelectric properties.