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Lead zirconate titanate

About: Lead zirconate titanate is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7141 publications have been published within this topic receiving 150878 citations.


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TL;DR: In this article, a pneumatic pressure rig was designed to measure the effective d33 coefficient of thin film piezoelectrics by applying a known stress and monitoring the induced charge.
Abstract: A pneumatic pressure rig was designed to measure the effective d33 coefficient of thin film piezoelectrics by applying a known stress and monitoring the induced charge. It was found that the stress state imposed included components both perpendicular and parallel to the film plane. The later were due to friction and could largely be relieved through sliding of the O-rings to their equilibrium positions for a given pressure. The induced charge stabilized as equilibrium was reached and most of it was produced by the normal component of the stress. By minimizing the surface friction and compensating for the remnant in-plane stress, very good agreement was obtained among the d33 values measured by the Berlincourt method, double-beam interferometry and this method for a bulk lead zirconate titanate (PZT) sample. The d33 value of PZT thin films made by sol-gel processing was also measured. The as deposited films usually showed very weak piezoelectricity with d33 values ranging from 0 to 10 pC/N, indicating little pre-existing alignment of the domains. With increasing poling field, the d33 value also increased and saturated at poling fields exceeding three times the coercive field. Typically, films with thicknesses around 1 μm had d33 values of 100 pC/N. Good agreement between double-beam interferometry and this technique was also obtained for thin films. The small difference between the two measurements is attributed to the effect of mechanical boundary conditions on the effective d33 coefficient.

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Tetsuo Kumazawa1, Yukihiro Kumagai1, Hideo Miura1, Makoto Kitano1, Keiko Kushida1 
TL;DR: In this paper, the polarization changes caused by applying mechanical stresses to a lead zirconate titanate (PZT) thin film were investigated, and both the remnant and spontaneous polarizations decreased when the PZT film was loaded with tensile stress.
Abstract: The polarization changes caused by applying mechanical stresses to a lead zirconate titanate (PZT) thin film were investigated. Both the remnant and spontaneous polarizations decreased when the PZT film was loaded with tensile stress. For compressive stresses, the remnant polarization increased, but spontaneous polarization did not change. In fatigue with tensile stress state, the polarization decreased earlier than when there was no stress, which depend on whether or not the initial polarization value was high. Conversely, in fatigue with compressive stress, the initial higher remnant polarization value was maintained compared with the polarization in the unstress condition.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used H and C NMR spectroscopy to characterize solvent and ligand effects in precursor solutions used for the deposition of ferroelectric PZT (lead zirconate titanate) thin films.
Abstract: Solvent reactions, ligand substitutions, and the oligomer/polymer backbone structure are important factors in the solution preparation of ceramic films. In this study the authors have used H and C NMR spectroscopy to characterize solvent and ligand effects in precursor solutions used for the deposition of ferroelectric PZT (lead zirconate titanate) thin films. Solutions were prepared by a sequential precursor addition method from carboxylate and alkoxide precursors of the three cations, and the solvent, acetic acid, methanol, and water. The results indicate that acetic acid was a key component in the solution preparation process. As observed previously for single metallic component systems, its presence resulted in esterification reactions, leading in the present case to the formation of methyl, isopropyl, and n-butyl acetates. Second, acetic acid functioned as a chemical modifier, or chelating agent, replacing essentially all of the alkoxy ligands of the original precursors. Since alkoxy replacement appeared to be complete, we may describe the PZT species formed in solution as oxo acetate in nature. Finally, the solvent and ligand behavior of a solution prepared by an inverted mixing order was compared to the behavior of the solution prepared by a sequential precursor addition. The spectra for the two solutions weremore » similar, and only differences in the relative intensities of the ester and alcoholic resonances were observed. 29 refs., 5 figs., 3 tabs.« less

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the fused deposition of ceramics (FDC) technique was used to fabricate piezoelectric ceramic skeletons for the development of PZT transducers with 2-2 connectivity for medical imaging.
Abstract: The fused deposition of ceramics (FDC) technique was used to fabricate piezoelectric ceramic skeletons for the development of piezoelectric composite transducers with 2–2 connectivity for medical imaging. The green parts were designed to have 30 vol% lead zirconate titanate ceramic (PZT-5H) in the final composites. Physical characterization of the sintered samples revealed that 96% of the theoretical density was achieved. Optical microscopy showed that defects due to the FDC mode of deposition, such as small roads and bubbles, were eliminated, because of improvements in powder processing. The electromechanical properties of the final composites were similar to the properties that were obtained for conventionally made composites. A matching layer and a backing layer, as well as wires and an inductor, were added to each FDC composite to fabricate a functional medical imaging transducer. The devices were tested in water using a steel target 3.5 cm thick. Echoes from the target could be detected with all the transducers that were fabricated using FDC. The sensitivities of the transducers were similar to that of a commercial transducer. However, the ringing was much longer than that for a commercial transducer, because the backing layer was not optimized in the transducers that were fabricated using FDC.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a PZT patch covered with asphalt lacquers is embedded into one of concrete cubes to measure the compressive strength gain of concrete since the conventional nondestructive detection techniques have many limitations.

113 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023116
2022267
2021168
2020180
2019189
2018206