Superelastic oxide micropillars enabled by surface tension–modulated 90° domain switching with excellent fatigue resistance

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Abstract

Superelastic materials capable of recovering large nonlinear strains are ideal for a variety of applications in morphing structures, reconfigurable systems, and robots. However, making oxide materials superelastic has been a long-standing challenge due to their intrinsic brittleness. Here, we fabricate ferroelectric BaTiO3 (BTO) micropillars that not only are superelastic but also possess excellent fatigue resistance, lasting over 1 million cycles without accumulating residual strains or noticeable variation in stress–strain curves. Phase field simulations reveal that the large recoverable strains of BTO micropillars arise from surface tension–modulated 90° domain switching and thus are size dependent, while the small energy barrier and ultralow energy dissipation are responsible for their unprecedented cyclic stability among superelastic materials. This work demonstrates a general strategy to realize superelastic and fatigue-resistant domain switching in ferroelectric oxides for many potential applications.

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Li, Y., Chu, K., Liu, C., Jiang, P., Qu, K., Gao, P., … Li, J. (2021). Superelastic oxide micropillars enabled by surface tension–modulated 90° domain switching with excellent fatigue resistance. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(24). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2025255118

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