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The influence of the distribution function of ferroelectric nanoparticles sizes on their electrocaloric and pyroelectric properties

We consider a model of a nanocomposite based on non-interacting spherical single-domain ferroelectric nanoparticles of various sizes embedded in a dielectric matrix. The size distribution function of these nanoparticles is selected as a part of the Gaussian distribution from minimum to maximum radius (truncated normal distribution). For such nanocomposites, we calculate the dependences of the reversible part of the electric polarization, the electrocaloric temperature change, and the dielectric permittivity on the external electric field, which have the characteristic form of hysteresis loops. We then analyze the change in the shape of the hysteresis loops relative to the particle size distribution parameters. We demonstrate that for the same mean-square dispersion, the remanent polarization, coercive field, dielectric permittivity maximums, maximums and minimums of the electrocaloric temperature change depend most strongly on the most probable radius, moderately depend on the dispersion, and have the weakest dependency on the nanoparticle maximum radius. We calculated and analyzed the dependences of pyroelectric figures of merit on the average radius of the nanoparticles in the composite. The dependences confirm the presence of a phase transition induced by the size of the nanoparticles, which is characterized by the presence of a maxima near the critical average radius of the particles, the value of which increases with increasing dispersion of the distribution function.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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