Giant electric-field-induced strain associated with defect dipole in Fe-doped Barium Titanate single crystal activated by electric field

Abstract

Aged 1 mol% Fe-doped BaTiO3 (Fe-BTO) single crystals are activated by an alternating current (AC) electric field, leading to a remarkable electric-field-induced strain close to 1%. The mechanism of this giant electric-field-induced strain behavior is investigated. In unaged Fe-BTO, the polarization-electric field (P-E) hysteresis loop exhibits a typical single loop, which transforms to a double-pinched hysteresis loop after aging. The strain-electric field (S-E) hysteresis loop reveals a dramatic increase in strain from 0.4% to 0.9% at 3 kV mm-1 after the aging. Unlike conventional thermal aging, the AC-field-activated aging process takes <1 hour, promoting domain switching and directional alignment of defect dipoles formed by Fe³⁺ dopants and oxygen vacancies. These aligned defect dipoles pin spontaneous polarization at low field, and once a threshold field is exceeded, they trigger abrupt 90° domain switching, producing the giant strain. Phase-field modeling confirms that dipole alignment, rather than defect migration, biases domain switching, facilitating this giant electric-field-induced strain response. The electric field-induced giant strain in aged Fe-BTO single crystals can be used for low frequency actuator applications.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Nov 2025
Accepted
18 Mar 2026
First published
02 Apr 2026

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Giant electric-field-induced strain associated with defect dipole in Fe-doped Barium Titanate single crystal activated by electric field

C. M. Baek, X. Shi, R. Kim, H. Lee, Y. Kim, J. M. Park, H. Huang, D. Jeong and J. Ryu, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA09562J

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