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Colossal Ferroelectric Photovoltaic Effect in Inequivalent Double-Perovskite Bi<sub>2</sub>FeMnO<sub>6</sub> Thin Films

Xudong Liu, Jie Tu, Yue‐Wen Fang, Guoqiang Xi, Hangren Li, Rong Wu, X. G. Liu, Dong-Fei Lu, Jiushe He, Junwei Zhang, Jianjun Tian, Linxing Zhang

2024Journal of the American Chemical Society19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Double perovskite films have been extensively studied for ferroelectric order, ferromagnetic order, and photovoltaic effects. The customized ion combinations and ordered ionic arrangements provide unique opportunities for bandgap engineering. Here, a synergistic strategy to induce chemical strain and charge compensation through inequivalent element substitution is proposed. A-site substitution of the barium ion is used to modify the chemical valence and defect density of the two B-site elements in Bi 2 FeMnO 6 double perovskite epitaxial thin films. We dramatically increased the ferroelectric photovoltaic effect to ∼135.67 μA/cm 2 from 30.62 μA/cm 2, which is the highest in ferroelectric thin films with a thickness of less than 100 nm under white-light LED irradiation. More importantly, the ferroelectric polarization can effectively improve the photovoltaic efficiency of more than 5 times. High-resolution HAADF-STEM, synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction and absorption spectroscopy, and DFT calculations collectively demonstrate that inequivalent ion plays a dual role of chemical strain (+1.92 and −1.04 GPa) and charge balance, thereby introducing lattice distortion effects. The reduction of the oxygen vacancy density and the competing Jahn–Teller distortion of the oxygen octahedron are the main phenomena of the change in electron–orbital hybridization, which also leads to enhanced ferroelectric polarization values and optical absorption. The inequivalent strategy can be extended to other double perovskite systems and applied to other functional materials, such as photocatalysis for efficient defect control.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryPerovskite (structure)FerroelectricityPhotovoltaic systemThin filmCondensed matter physicsOptoelectronicsNanotechnologyCrystallographyDielectricPhysicsElectrical engineeringMaterials scienceEngineeringMultiferroics and related materialsFerroelectric and Piezoelectric MaterialsMagnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials
Colossal Ferroelectric Photovoltaic Effect in Inequivalent Double-Perovskite Bi<sub>2</sub>FeMnO<sub>6</sub> Thin Films | Litcius