Abstract
The dielectric properties of single-crystal and ceramic BaTiO3 and of single-crystal SrTiO3 were investigated as functions of hydrostatic pressure to 25 kbar and temperature to 150°C. The Curie point of BaTiO3 decreased linearly with increasing pressure, but at a rate which varied from -4.6 to -5.9°C/kbar for different samples. Its spontaneous polarization Ps decreased slowly (<2% per kbar) up to the transition pressure, where it dropped rapidly. This change in Ps is primarily due to the displacement of the Curie point to lower temperatures. At constant temperature, the dielectric constant ε in the cubic phase of both compounds obeys the relationship ε=C*(pp0). At 25°C, C*=2.8×104 kbar and p0=18.5 kbar for pure single-crystal BaTiO3, and C*=1.2×104 kbar and p0=40 kbar for single-crystal SrTiO3. Both C* and p0 change with temperature. Similarly, the Curie-Weiss constant C and temperature T0 change with pressure. The temperature dependence of ε is separated into volume-dependent and volume-independent contributions, and it is shown that the change of the infrared polarizability with temperature at constant volume is the predominant factor in determining the change in ε.