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Flexible Ferroelectrics Bring Two Material Worlds Together


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SEM image of flexible haloimidazole crystals

A scanning electron microscopy image of flexible haloimidazole crystals, which were found to show both ferroelectric and piezoelectric properties.

Credit: Seungbum Hong / Argonne National Laboratory

Until recently, "flexible ferroelectrics" could have been thought of as an oxymoronic phrase. However, thanks to a new discovery by the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory in collaboration with researchers at Northwestern University, scientists have pioneered a new class of materials with advanced functionalities that moves the idea from the realm of irony into reality.

Ferroelectrics are a useful type of material that is found in capacitors that are used in sensors, as well as computer memory and RFID cards. Their special properties originate from the fact that they contain charged regions polarized in a specific orientation, which can be controlled with an external electric field. But they've also had a big drawback as engineers try to use them in new inventions.

"Ferroelectric materials are known for being quite brittle, and so it has always been a big challenge to make them mechanically flexible," says Argonne nanoscientist Seungbum Hong, who helped lead the research. "Because ferroelectricity and this kind of flexibility are relatively rare properties to see on their own, to have both ferroelectricity and flexibility in this new material is basically unprecedented."

The researchers describe their work in "Flexible Ferroelectric Organic Crystals," published in the journal Nature Communications

Previous generations of ferroelectric materials were primarily ceramic, Hong says, which made them fairly brittle. In the new material, the crystal planes at the atomic level tend to slip past one another, adding to the material's ductility.

One advantage of flexible ferroelectrics comes from the fact that all ferroelectric materials are also piezoelectric, which means they can convert an applied mechanical force into an electrical signal, or vice versa; for example, when you flick a lighter to generate a spark. Having more flexible ferroelectrics could enable a greater response from a smaller input.

With flexible ferroelectrics, scientists and engineers may have the opportunity to adapt these materials for a host of new and improved uses, including precision actuators for atomic force microscopy, ultrasonic imaging sensors, and emitters for medical applications and even sensors for some automotive applications.

For data storage, the impact may be even greater. "There's a very large information density potential with ferroelectric storage," Hong says. "This could make a big difference as we think about future generations of the data cloud."

The Nature Communications article is authored by Magdalena Owczarek, Karl A. Hujsak, Daniel P. Ferris, Aleksandrs Prokofjevs, Irena Majerz, Przemysław Szklarz, Huacheng Zhang, Amy A. Sarjeant, Charlotte L. Stern, Ryszard Jakubas, Seungbum Hong, Vinayak P. Dravid, and J. Fraser Stoddart. Sir James, one of the lead Northwestern authors, received the 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on molecular machines.


 

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