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- Ferroelectricity - Wikipedia
In physics and materials science, ferroelectricity is the property of certain materials that exhibit a spontaneous electric polarization —an internal electric alignment that arises naturally without an external source This polarization can be reversed when an external electric field is applied [1][2]
- Ferroelectric Materials: What Are They? (With Examples)
Ferroelectric materials exhibit ferroelectricity, defined as the ability to maintain a spontaneous electric polarization that can be reversed with an opposite external electric field Ferroelectricity was first identified in Rochelle salt by Valasek in 1921
- Ferroelectric materials - Nature
Ferroelectric materials are dielectric materials characterised by a spontaneous polarisation: they show an electric dipole moment even in absence of an external electric field
- Ferroelectricity in atomic-scale titanium dioxide dielectric films
Ferroelectric materials are distinguished from conventional dielectric materials by their ability to exhibit spontaneous electric polarization that can be reversed by an applied electric field, enabling a wide range of applications (1, 2)
- A century of ferroelectricity - Nature Materials
Ferroelectricity was experimentally discovered one hundred years ago, spurring research on its fundamental properties and potential applications Ultrasound, a commonly used medical procedure, is
- Ferroelectric materials toward next-generation electromechanical . . . - AAAS
New high-performance ferroelectric materials have emerged, such as ferroelectric ceramics with a piezoelectric coefficient >2000 pC N −1 (4 to 10 times higher than currently used materials) and ferroelectric crystals simultaneously possessing high piezoelectricity and high light transparency
- Ferroelectricity - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Ferroelectricity is exhibited by materials with spontaneous polarization and is reversible through the application of an electric field (Lines and Glass, 1977; Mitsui et al , 1976)
- Ferroelectricity | Piezoelectricity, Pyroelectricity, Hysteresis . . .
Ferroelectric materials—for example, barium titanate (BaTiO 3) and Rochelle salt—are composed of crystals in which the structural units are tiny electric dipoles; that is, in each unit the centres of positive charge and of negative charge are slightly separated
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