Lead-free piezoceramics
Top Cited Papers
- 31 October 2004
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 432 (7013), 84-87
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03028
Abstract
Lead has recently been expelled from many commercial applications and materials (for example, from solder, glass and pottery glaze) owing to concerns regarding its toxicity. Lead zirconium titanate (PZT) ceramics are high-performance piezoelectric materials, which are widely used in sensors, actuators and other electronic devices; they contain more than 60 weight per cent lead. Although there has been a concerted effort to develop lead-free piezoelectric ceramics, no effective alternative to PZT has yet been found1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14. Here we report a lead-free piezoelectric ceramic with an electric-field-induced strain comparable to typical actuator-grade PZT. We achieved this through the combination of the discovery of a morphotropic phase boundary in an alkaline niobate-based perovskite solid solution, and the development of a processing route leading to highly 〈001〉 textured polycrystals. The ceramic exhibits a piezoelectric constant d33 (the induced charge per unit force applied in the same direction) of above 300 picocoulombs per newton (pC N-1), and texturing the material leads to a peak d33 of 416 pC N-1. The textured material also exhibits temperature-independent field-induced strain characteristics.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- High Curie temperature piezocrystals in the BiScO3-PbTiO3 perovskite systemApplied Physics Letters, 2003
- Ferroelectric Ceramics: History and TechnologyJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1999
- Present Status of Non-Lead-Based Piezoelectric CeramicsKey Engineering Materials, 1998
- Hysteresis Curve of X-Ray Diffraction Peak Intensity in Lead Zirconate Titanate CeramicsJapanese Journal of Applied Physics, 1997
- Measurements of Complex Piezoelectric d33 Constant in Ferroelectric Ceramics under High Electric Field DrivingJapanese Journal of Applied Physics, 1995
- Mechanism of Grain Orientation During Hot‐Pressing of Bismuth TitanateJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1989
- Properties of Sodium‐Lithium Niobate Solid Solution Ceramics with Small Lithium ConcentrationsJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1968
- Alkali-rare earth niobates with the tungsten bronze-type structureMaterials Research Bulletin, 1968
- Topotactical reactions with ferrimagnetic oxides having hexagonal crystal structures—IJournal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry, 1959
- Polymorphism in potassium niobate, sodium niobate, and otherABO3compoundsActa Crystallographica, 1951