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Acceptor doping enhanced defect effects on the electrical properties of PZST antiferroelectric ceramics

  • Boxiang Zhou
  • , Xiang Zhang
  • , Xuefeng Chen
  • , Genshui Wang
  • , Chao Qian
  • , Xinghao Chen
  • , Qiuyi Zhong
  • , Jing Yang
  • , Wei Bai
  • , Yuanyuan Zhang*
  • , Xiaodong Tang
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • East China Normal University
  • CAS - Shanghai Institute of Ceramics

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Chemical doping is a key approach to tailoring the properties of PbZrO3-based antiferroelectric materials. However, defects introduced during aliovalent doping can sometimes play a decisive role in regulating material properties. Here, we systematically investigate the effects of doping with Gd3+, Ba2+, and K+ ions on the phase structure and physical properties of Pb[(Zr0.7Sn0.3)0.94Ti0.06]O3 (PZST94/6). Gd3+ doping enhances antiferroelectricity, while Ba2+ doping enhances ferroelectricity, consistent with predictions based on tolerance factor and electronegativity. In contrast, doping with large-radius K+ ions contradicts the above predictions and unexpectedly stabilizes the antiferroelectric phase. The mechanism involves a significant increase in oxygen vacancy concentration upon K+ doping, which leads to the formation of defect dipoles. The local internal electric field generated by these dipoles interferes with polarization switching, ultimately raising the phase transition electric field while lowering both remanent and maximum polarizations in PZST94/6 ceramics. This work demonstrates that defect engineering can override conventional predictions based on ionic radius and electronegativity parameters, thereby offering a novel strategy for designing high-performance antiferroelectric materials.

Original languageEnglish
Article number122902
JournalApplied Physics Letters
Volume128
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 23 Mar 2026

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