aInstitute of Applied Mechanics, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan, ROC
bDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan, ROC
Abstract:
This article documents both modeling and experimental studies developed to investigate the switching behavior of ferroelectric single crystals. The theoretical model makes a priori ansatz that switching follows the evolution of a particular domain pattern. The choice of this configuration is dictated by the requirement that domains remain compatible during evolution, giving rise to a low-energy path for the overall switching. The construction of this pattern is achieved using multirank laminates. It offers an advantage of specifying different types of domain wall movements, leading to a distinction for the switching types. A loading experiment is performed on a barium titanate (BaTiO3) single crystal with a constant compressive stress and a cyclic electric field. Both 180 and 90 coercive fields are measured as input parameters required for the theoretical framework. The simulation results show good agreement with the observed strains measured by the present and other available experiments. It is found that depolarization has a non-trivial influence on attainable actuation strains.