Physicochemical, dielectric, and piezoelectric properties and conductivity of LiNbO3: ZnO crystals (4.02–8.91 mol %)
- Authors: Biryukova I.V.1, Makarova O.V.1, Palatnikov M.N.1, Sandler V.A.1, Sidorov N.V.1
 - 
							Affiliations: 
							
- Tananaev Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Rare Elements and Mineral Raw Materials, Kolsky Scientific Center
 
 - Issue: Vol 62, No 1 (2017)
 - Pages: 82-89
 - Section: Physical Science of Materials
 - URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7842/article/view/198777
 - DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063784217010170
 - ID: 198777
 
Cite item
Abstract
The physicochemical characteristics of the crystal–melt system during the growth of LiNbO3: ZnO crystals have been investigated in the range of impurity concentration [ZnO] in the melt of 4.02–8.91 mol %. The threshold impurity concentration corresponding to a significant change in the formation conditions and structure of LiNbO3: ZnO crystals is refined ([ZnO] = 6.76 mol % in the melt). The dielectric and piezoelectric properties and conductivity of multidomain LiNbO3: ZnO crystals have been analyzed. The occurrence of a significant spontaneous increase in the unipolarity upon high-temperature annealing has only been shown to be typical of LiNbO3: ZnO crystals grown from melts in the near-threshold concentration range (~5.4 < [ZnO] ≤ 6.76 mol % in the melt). This effect is accompanied by a large and reproducible increase in the static piezoelectric coefficient d333. The value of the piezoelectric-coefficient jump Δd333 linearly increases with an increase in the specific-conductivity jump Δσ near the temperature T* ≈ 800 K.
About the authors
I. V. Biryukova
Tananaev Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Rare Elements and Mineral Raw Materials, Kolsky Scientific Center
														Email: palat_mn@chemy.kolasc.net.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Apatity, Murmansk oblast, 184200						
O. V. Makarova
Tananaev Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Rare Elements and Mineral Raw Materials, Kolsky Scientific Center
														Email: palat_mn@chemy.kolasc.net.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Apatity, Murmansk oblast, 184200						
M. N. Palatnikov
Tananaev Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Rare Elements and Mineral Raw Materials, Kolsky Scientific Center
							Author for correspondence.
							Email: palat_mn@chemy.kolasc.net.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Apatity, Murmansk oblast, 184200						
V. A. Sandler
Tananaev Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Rare Elements and Mineral Raw Materials, Kolsky Scientific Center
														Email: palat_mn@chemy.kolasc.net.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Apatity, Murmansk oblast, 184200						
N. V. Sidorov
Tananaev Institute of Chemistry and Technology of Rare Elements and Mineral Raw Materials, Kolsky Scientific Center
														Email: palat_mn@chemy.kolasc.net.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Apatity, Murmansk oblast, 184200						
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