Abstract
Relaxor ferroelectrics show substantial responses to electric fields. The key difference from normal ferroelectrics is a temperature-dependent inhomogeneous structure and its dynamics. The lead-based complex perovskite Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O3 is an intriguing system in which the inhomogeneous structure can be controlled by thermal treatment. Herein, we report investigations of the phase transitions in single crystals of Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O3 via changing the degree of randomness in which In and Nb occupy the B site of the ABO3 perovskite structure. We studied the dynamic properties of the structure using inelastic light scattering and the static properties using diffuse X-ray scattering. These properties depend on the degree of randomness with which the B site is occupied. When the distribution of occupied In/Nb sites is regular, the antiferroelectric phase is stabilised by a change in the collective transverse-acoustic wave, which suppresses long-range ferroelectric order and the growth of the inhomogeneous structure. However, when the B site is occupied randomly, a fractal structure grows as the temperature decreases below T *~475 K, and nanosized ferroelectric domains are produced by the percolation of self-similar and static polar nanoregions.
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Introduction
Because a crystalline solid comprises a periodic arrangement of atoms, crystals are usually expected to be spatially homogeneous. However, in real materials, crystal imperfections often result in inhomogeneities such as nanodomains and nanoclusters. Such inhomogeneous systems have attracted significant attention in the field of condensed matter physics because fluctuations in the inhomogeneous structures can potentially lead to large responses to external fields1,2,3.
Relaxors are a special class of inhomogeneous systems in which mesoscopic polar regions induce giant dielectric and electromechanical responses3,4,5. Ever since the discovery of record-setting electromechanical responses in lead-oxide perovskite—Pb(B′B′′)O3—relaxors, these compounds have been used for applications in high-power military sonar, ultrasonic transducers for diagnosis devices and high-precision actuators4. The origin of the huge dielectric and electromechanical response is understood conceptually as being due to the reversible motion of mesoscopic polar domains and domain boundaries on length scales of micrometres3,4,5.
From structural considerations, the unstable domains are attributed to the arrangements of local polar regions several nanometres wide called static polar nanoregions (PNRs), which are similar to the ferroelectric nanodomains (FNDs) in a typical ferroelectric such as BaTiO3 6. Therefore we can understand relaxors in the same conceptual framework as BaTiO3, using the Comes–Guinnier–Lambert model in which the dynamic PNRs in relaxors correspond to nanometre-sized regions with time-dependent polarization7,8,9,10. However, compared with BaTiO3, relaxors are still not clearly understood because of their complexity, which originates from fluctuating polar structures that spread over large length and time scales11,12,13,14. The generation of the wide distributions of characteristic lengths and timescales in relaxors can be attributed to the random electric fields produced by different ions occupying equivalent lattice sites15,16; the investigation of the effects of random electric fields on the distributions of the characteristic length and time scales is thus necessary.
A method for characterising the spatial structures and dynamics of relaxors may be offered by the introduction of ‘fractons’, which involves the concept of a fractal and its local vibrations. Although fractals are usually found in noncrystalline glasses, polymers and gels17,18,19,20, PNRs form clusters, nanodomains and microdomains, which generate fractal structures in crystalline relaxors over nanometre-sized regions13,14,21,22. In addition, although the fractal-and-fracton picture describes systems on a coarse-grained level, it deals well with a broad distribution of length and time scales. Thus, the fractal picture provides a powerful technique for understanding relaxors. Fractals in relaxors are reported to change near phase transitions13,14, but few reports exist that treat the relaxor structure and dynamics in a unified approach, even though they are connected with each other. The present study addresses this issue using quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS) and diffuse synchrotron X-ray scattering experiments on Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O3 (PIN) to investigate the distribution of spatial structures and dynamics. Based on the temperature dependence of these properties, we discuss phase transitions in relaxors from the viewpoint of fractals.
PIN is an ideal system for the study of inherent randomness. In PIN, the arrangement of In and Nb can be controlled thermally, and the resulting structures are broadly classified into two categories: (1) a disordered PIN (D-PIN) in which In and Nb ions randomly occupy B sites in equal site numbers and (2) an ordered PIN (O-PIN) in which In and Nb ions are 1:1 ordered23,24,25. D-PIN exhibits relaxor behaviour with a freezing temperature at T f ~ 240 K, whereas O-PIN exhibits a first-order antiferroelectric phase transition at T N ~ 430 K. The fractal structure of D-PIN has been confirmed by electron-diffraction patterns, as shown in Fig. 1. Figure 1(a), obtained from ref.26, shows an inhomogeneous pattern. We converted this image to a 2-bit image (Ising system), as shown in Fig. 1(b), and we then applied three successive 3 × 3 block-spin renormalisations [Fig. 1(c)–(e)]. These pictures never exhibit a single, solid clour (black or white), indicating that the structure is self-similar. By comparing D-PIN with O-PIN, we can discuss the crossover from a normal phase transition to relaxor freezing behaviour and clarify the connection between random electric fields and the origin of relaxors with wide distributions of static and dynamic fluctuations.
Results and Discussion
Static properties of PIN: Diffuse X-ray scattering
Figure 2(a) represents the diffuse X-ray scattering from D-PIN in the [00 l] direction around the 300 Bragg peak at various temperatures and on a double-logarithmic scale. At large l [between 0.033 and 0.19 reciprocal lattice units (r.l.u.)] and at 100 K [the red curve in Fig. 2(a)], the diffuse scattering is linear on a log–log plot, implying that it follows a power law, \(I(l)\propto {l}^{-{D}_{{\rm{f}}}}\), with fractal dimension D f = 2.55. This range of l corresponds to lengths ranging from 21 Å to 122 Å. These length scales and the value of D f at 100 K are consistent with the low-temperature results for Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3 13. The existence of self-similarity in D-PIN was also confirmed by our previous transmission electron microscope measurements and analysis, as shown in Fig. 1. As the temperature increases, the range of l becomes narrow and shifts to high values. Because the diffuse scattering in relaxors is mainly caused by the static component of the structure27,28, the power law results from the self-similar static PNRs. The change in l-range thus indicates that the distribution of static PNRs becomes narrow and that the average size of the PNR decreases upon heating. The fractal dimension D f is plotted as a function of temperature in Fig. 2(c). It increases monotonically upon cooling, but the variation of D f with temperature decreases below 220 K (~T f), slightly changing to the lowest measured temperature. The maximum value is approximately 2.5, which is close to the value D f = 2.52 for a 3D percolation cluster. When the site-percolation threshold is set to 31.1%, 3D clusters due to percolation-by-invasion are calculated to have a fractal dimension ~2.5229,30.
It is widely accepted that relaxors are usually characterised by three temperatures. The highest is the Burns temperature T B 15, above which the structure is essentially in the paraelectric state characteristic of normal ferroelectrics. Below T B, frustration between electric and spatial instabilities at the B site of the perovskite structure ABO3 induces dynamic PNRs (or nanometre-sized regions of time-dependent polarisation). The second temperature is the intermediate temperature T *, below which some PNRs become sufficiently large to become static PNRs (or FNDs)31,32. The final temperature is the Curie temperature T C, at which the ferroelectric phase transition occurs [Alternatively, if the ferroelectric transition is absent, such as in D-PIN and Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3, the PNRs freeze at the temperature T f]33. Below T C, the static PNRs merge into larger microdomains16. The temperature dependence of D f in D-PIN must reflect the growth process of inhomogeneous PNRs. Isolated PNRs at high temperatures (where D f ~ 0) interact with each other, and their size increases with decreasing temperature, finally percolating in a 3D space below 220 K. The dramatic growth below 475 K must be attributed to the appearance of static PNRs (or FNDs), i.e. T * ~ 475 K. This behaviour of the diffuse scattering and the smooth change in D f does not occur for homogeneous crystals. Relaxor ferroelectrics, however, are characterised by their inhomogeneous structures and growth processes.
Figure 2(b) shows the diffuse X-ray scattering patterns of O-PIN under the same experimental conditions as for Fig. 2(a). The diffuse scattering looks similar to that of D-PIN; however, the diffuse scattering is smeared below the antiferroelectric phase transition because h/4 0 l/4 superlattice reflections appear near the 300 Bragg reflection. At high temperatures, the temperature dependence of D f for O-PIN shown in Fig. 2(c) is the same as for D-PIN; thus, we conclude that below T B, dynamic PNRs start to grow from a paraelectric phase in both D-PIN and O-PIN. The difference is that the growth of the fractal structure is interrupted by the antiferroelectric phase transition in O-PIN, whereas in D-PIN, the fractal structure grows until the inhomogeneous structure percolates in a 3D space.
Dynamic properties of PIN: Light scattering
Light-scattering spectra from D-PIN and O-PIN are shown in Fig. 3(a) and (d) in a double-logarithmic plot. Scattering from longitudinal acoustic (LA) phonons appears as a Lorentzian-shaped peak near 40 GHz. The fitted parameters of the LA phonons in D-PIN and O-PIN, including the Brillouin shift ν, the full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) Γ and dv/dT, are shown in Fig. 3(g) as functions of temperature. The parameters ν and Γ show broad changes around the peak temperature of the temperature-dependent dielectric constant, i.e. T m in D-PIN and T N in O-PIN. The change is attributed to precursor phenomena before the freezing point of D-PIN and the antiferroelectric phase transition of O-PIN. When perovskite ferroelectrics do not contain any inhomogeneous structures, precursor phenomena are absent or appear only in a narrow temperature range with the LA phonons because a linear coupling between the order parameter and the longitudinal strain is prohibited in the paraelectric phases by symmetry restrictions34,35. Because the local structures in D-PIN and O-PIN are noncentrosymmetric, as shown by local-structure analysis22, the precursor phenomena can be attributed to piezoelectric coupling inside the noncentrosymmetric disordered regions, i.e. the PNRs. In other words, the polarisation fluctuations can couple linearly with the strain fluctuations in the inhomogeneous structures10,36,37. The ferroelectric instability in the antiferroelectric phase transition is not special but is also observed in PbZrO3 38. The differences between the LA phonon in the paraelectric phases of D-PIN and O-PIN appear at the maximum point in dv/dT and at the minimum point in dΓ/dT, both at T *, where (dv/dT)−1 and dΓ/dT can be interpreted as the growth rates of the polarisation fluctuations per degree K10,37. These differences between D-PIN and O-PIN indicate that the growth rate (temperature derivative) of the polarisation fluctuations in D-PIN increases during cooling but is suppressed below T * due to the appearance of the static PNRs, while the growth rate in O-PIN is not suppressed to T N. We postulate that the random electric fields in relaxor D-PIN generate the static PNRs in the paraelectric phase below T *. It is worth noting that similar LA phonon behaviour was reported in disordered Pb(Sc1/2Nb1/2)O3 (D-PSN)39. Compared with D-PIN, D-PSN shows sharp changes at the phase transition. In future work, we will investigate the way in which different B-site ions tune the material’s properties.
The spectra of D-PIN in Fig. 3(a) show that QELS follows a power law, I(ν) ∝ ν −α, wherein ν and α denote the frequency shift and exponent, respectively. Typically, the QELS follows a power law when the distribution of the relaxation time τ also follows a power law: f(τ) = τ −(α + 1) 14,40. Because the diffuse scattering shown in Fig. 2(a) is the result of the large size-distribution of self-similar PNRs, the relaxation time is distributed so that the PNR size is proportional to the relaxation time. The smooth change in α from 0.24 at 503 K to 0.73 at 303 K reflects the change in thermal excitation number of relaxation and the distribution of relaxation times. To remove the effect of the excited population from the light-scattering spectra, the reduced intensity J(ν) = νI(ν)/[n(ν) + 1] is usually used, wherein n(ν) is the Bose–Einstein factor. The reduced intensity J(ν) is proportional to C(ν) × g(ν), wherein C(ν) and g(ν) represent the light (Raman)-coupling function and the vibrational density of states, respectively. In other words, J(ν) contains information about the dynamics of the fractal structure— the fractons as well as the fluctuations of local strain41,42. The reduced-intensity spectra of D-PIN are shown in Fig. 3(b). The reduced intensity J(ν) also follows a power law [J(ν) ∝ ν μ, where μ represents the exponent for a given reduced intensity spectrum].
Figure 3(c) shows how μ depends on temperature. As the temperature decreases from 700 K to 220 K, μ decreases from 1.8 to 1.3. The minimum in μ occurs at 280 K, which must be related to the fractal structure and its dynamics. The magnitude and temperature dependence of μ are consistent with the results of Koreeda et al.14,40.
The corresponding light-scattering spectra from O-PIN are shown in Fig. 3(d). The QELS can be reproduced by two power laws. The intensity is an order of magnitude smaller than that from D-PIN; thus, the low-frequency parts of the spectra may be due to a tail from the strong elastic scattering. Accordingly, we derived the exponent μ for O-PIN using just the high-frequency parts of the spectra, as shown in Fig. 3(e). Figure 3(f) shows the resulting value of μ as a function of temperature. The QELS are fairly independent of temperature and result in μ staying near 2. This indicates that the QELS originates from a phonon tail of a peak that occurs at a frequency greater than 1000 GHz. Reports indicate that in the scattering geometry, every perovskite-based relaxor ferroelectric has a phonon peak around 1000 GHz21,43,44,45. The peak shape is usually reproduced by a single Lorentzian or a damped harmonic oscillator; therefore the tail is proportional to ν −2 at lower frequencies, as is observed in Fig. 3(e). Because μ is close to 2 for both D-PIN and O-PIN at high temperatures, the ferroelectric instability related to the QELS does not significantly contribute to the spectrum in either case at high temperatures. Only in D-PIN does the ferroelectric instability grow with decreasing temperature, which leads to an increase in QELS intensity and a decrease in μ. Inhomogeneous structures should exist in O-PIN, as expected from the LA phonons, but the value of μ for O-PIN indicates that the relaxation of these structures does not play an important role in this phase transition. This must be related to the fact that the antiferroelectric phase transition is induced by collective transverse-acoustic waves.
Parameters characterising the fractals
Although D f, which represents the spatial self-similarity at a specific length scale, was determined from diffuse scattering experiments, two more parameters are needed to characterise a single fractal. The first is the fracton dimension \(\tilde{d}\), which characterises a localised vibration at a fractal. The second is the localisation factor d ϕ , which determines the distance over which a single fracton can propagate in the strain direction: \(u(r)\propto \exp [-\frac{1}{2}{(r/L)}^{{d}_{{\varphi }}}]\), wherein L denotes the localisation length. If D f is determined as in refs14 and 19 with the two parameters fixed at \(\tilde{d}=\) 1.32 and \({d}_{\varphi }=\) 1.014, D f increases gradually from 1.8 at 700 K to 2.6 at 223 K, as shown in Fig. 3(h). The quantity D f behaves in a manner similar to that determined from diffuse scattering, except that the magnitude is different. We attribute this difference to the fact that the parameters \(\tilde{d}\) and \({d}_{\varphi }\) were fixed in ref.14. The relation between D f, \(\tilde{d}\) and \({d}_{\varphi }\) has been well-studied in previous investigations, which give the following relation17,18,46:
which allows us to determine \(\tilde{d}{d}_{\varphi }\) from light-scattering experiments and D f. (If \({d}_{\varphi }=\frac{{D}_{{\rm{f}}}}{\tilde{d}} \sim (2-\tilde{d})\) is valid as shown in ref.18, we can determine both \(\tilde{d}\) and \({d}_{\varphi }\), independently. However, invalid \({d}_{\varphi }\) less than 1 was obtained using that equation in the present study. Similar problems were also pointed out in ref.46. Therefore, we only determined \(\tilde{d}{d}_{\varphi }\)). In this equation, C(ν) and g(ν) are proportional to \({L}^{{D}_{f}-2{d}_{\varphi }}\) and \({\nu }^{\tilde{d}-1}\), respectively. The product \(\tilde{d}{d}_{\varphi }\) is evidently temperature dependent, as shown in Fig. 3(i). This indicates that a close connection exists between the distribution of spatial inhomogeneities and the distributions of characteristic times and/or localisations. This insight has not been pointed out in previous studies on relaxors. Because large static PNRs take long times to relax, we hypothesise that changes in \(\tilde{d}\) dominate, rather than changes in \({d}_{\varphi }\). In other words, the static nature of the fractal structure in relaxors is linked to the dynamic characteristics of the PNRs.
Impact of B-site randomness on inhomogeneity
Based on the results from diffuse X-ray scattering and inelastic light scattering, we discuss below self-similar PNRs (or FNDs) with a wide distribution of characteristic lengths and times, as shown in Fig. 4. D-PIN and O-PIN differ from each other in the degree of disorder in the occupancy of their B sites. When In and Nb are disordered on the B sites, a fractal structure grows during cooling below T *, and nanosized ferroelectric domains47 are produced by percolation around T f. In this case, the dielectric constant is enhanced by the localised vibrations (fractons). However, when In and Nb are ordered on the B sites, the zone-boundary transverse-acoustic (TA) phonon mode softens and induces the antiferroelectric phase at T N 48,49,50. This is because short wavelength vibrations such as the zone-boundary TA phonons are easily affected by the occupation of the B sites. Given that the results for diffuse scattering, QELS and LA phonons are similar for D-PIN and O-PIN at high temperatures, we conclude that a ferroelectric instability always exists in this PIN system, but that ordered occupancy of the B-site stabilises the antiferroelectric phase, thereby suppressing long-range ferroelectric order and the growth of self-similar PNRs. One toy model, based on simple dipole-dipole interactions between off-centred Pb ions and Coulomb interactions from random B-sites51, distils the essence of the behaviour of D-PIN and O-PIN. It might be intriguing for future work to improve and apply this model tin an effort to produce the inhomogeneous structures with various temporal-spatial scales found in this study.
Conclusion
In summary, we have determined the static and dynamic properties of B-site disordered Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O3 and B-site ordered Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O3 via diffuse X-ray scattering and inelastic light scattering. These properties depend on the degree of disorder of the B-site occupancy. When the B site is occupied randomly, the fractal structure grows as the temperature decreases below T * ~ 475 K, and nanosized ferroelectric domains are produced by the percolation of self-similar static polar nanoregions (PNRs). However, when the distribution of occupied In/Nb sites is regular, the antiferroelectric phase is stabilised, which suppresses long-range ferroelectric order and the growth of the self-similar PNRs. Understanding the inhomogeneous structures of ferroelectrics may enable enormous potential applications in high-performance capacitors and actuators and help to overcome the size effect of dielectric tips.
Methods
To investigate the inhomogeneous structure in PIN crystals, we measured diffuse X-ray scattering around the 300 Bragg reflection along the transverse [001] direction over the wave-vector range from 0 to 0.5 r.l.u. at high resolution. Such a transverse scan does not detect strong Huang scattering, and this enables a simple discussion of the diffuse scattering from ferroelectric fluctuations in crystals13. The data were collected at temperatures from 100 K to 800 K with 12.398 keV X-rays at the BL22XU of SPring-852. The energy was set just below the absorption-edge of Pb LIII to avoid the huge background due to X-ray fluorescence. The dynamics were probed by Rayleigh–Brillouin light scattering under a microscope and in the backscattering geometry53. To observe QELS from polarisation relaxation, the polarisation configuration was vertical-to-horizontal (VH); the vertical-to-vertical configuration detects not only QELS from polarisation relaxation but also that from thermal diffusion.
PIN single crystals were flux-grown from a PbO–In2O3–Nb2O5 system. The D-PIN crystals were prepared by quenching the as-grown crystals from 950 °C to room temperature, and the O-PIN crystals were prepared by annealing the D-PIN crystals at 923 °C for 20 h24,25. These crystals had dimensions of 2 × 2 × 1 mm3 and a pseudocubic (100) plane crystal habit. Because larger PIN crystals cannot be grown, and because indium has a large neutron-absorption coefficient, high-energy-X-ray and visible-light measurements are preferable to neutrons48,49,53. Before being measured, these crystals were etched with hydrofluoric acid (HF-etched) to remove the outer layers. Our previous study of as-grown PIN51 had found that the structure of the outer layers is different from that of the inner layers. We confirmed the removal of the outer layers with X-ray scattering using Mo Kα radiation at 17.5 keV. The temperature dependence of the complex dielectric constant of the PIN was also confirmed before the scattering measurements. Diffuse and frequency-dependent peaks were observed in D-PIN, but no frequency-dependent peaks were seen in O-PIN. The X-ray scattering and dielectric properties are shown in Supplementary Figure S1.
Data Availability
The datasets generated during the current study are available from the corresponding author (S. T.) on reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Koreeda, A., Harries, J., Matsuura, M., Yoneda, Y., Iwata, M., Nishimatsu, T., Mizuki, J. & Ko, J.-H. for stimulating discussions and Shimizu, D., Kida, A. and Sakamoto, J. for experimental supports. The diffuse X-ray scattering experiments were performed at BL22XU of SPring-8 (Proposal No. 2013B3713). This study was partly supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant No. 16K04931, No. 17K05030, No. 26400327, and No. 25400329; The Murata Research Foundation and MEXT, Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas ‘Novel States of Matter Induced by Frustration’ (No. 19052002).
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S.T. and K.O. initiated and supervised the project. H.O. and N.Y. contributed to the crystal growth. S.M. performed the TEM observation. S.T., Y.A. and S.K. measured the inelastic light scattering. K.O. and H.T. measured the diffuse X-ray scattering. S.T. and K.O. wrote the manuscript. All authors participated in the discussion of the obtained results.
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Tsukada, S., Ohwada, K., Ohwa, H. et al. Relation between Fractal Inhomogeneity and In/Nb-Arrangement in Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O3 . Sci Rep 7, 17508 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-17349-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-17349-3
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