Tailoring the room temperature ferroelectric/paraelectric state in polycrystalline (Ba0.70Sr0.30)TiO3 thin films for silicon compatible integration

Authors

X. Zhu, G. Le Rhun, B. Dkhil, Y. Ren, J. Zhu, M. Aïd, and E. Defay

Reference

Ceramics International, vol. 41, no. 10, Part B, pp. 14412-14418, 2015

Description

Polycrystalline (Ba0.70Sr0.30)TiO3 (BST) thin films were prepared by ion beam sputtering and postdeposition annealing method, and their crystallization kinetics was monitored in situ. It was found that 550 °C is a critical temperature for the BST׳s perovskite phase formation, below which a long annealing time is needed to obtain good perovskite structure because of a slow crystallization process, while generating much lower inhomogeneous and thermoelastic strains. As a consequence, the ferroelectric/paraelectric state formation in BST films, being strain sensitive, was purposefully tailored through simple kinetics instead of pure thermodynamics. A long time annealing at 530 °C induced a room temperature (RT) ferroelectric state, whereas the annealing at 550 °C and above promoted much faster perovskite crystallization and tailored the film at RT in its paraelectric state, thereby giving rise to two distinct dielectric behaviors. These findings provide important implications for simply controllable state growth of perovskite thin films with desired electrical properties so as to meet their respective requirements in different application fields.

Link

doi:10.1016/j.ceramint.2015.07.076

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