Ferroelectric opening switch
10431280 ยท 2019-10-01
Assignee
Inventors
- Geoffrey L. Brennecka (Lakewood, CO, US)
- Steven F. Glover (Albuquerque, NM, US)
- Gary Pena (Albuquerque, NM, US)
- Fred J. Zutavern (Albuquerque, NM, US)
Cpc classification
H01G7/06
ELECTRICITY
H03K17/12
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A ferroelectric opening switch is enabled by controlled polarization switching via nucleation in a ferroelectric material, such as BaTiO.sub.3, Pb(Zr,Ti)O.sub.3, LiNbO.sub.3, LiTaO.sub.3, or variants thereof. For example, nucleation sites can be provided by mechanical seeding, grain boundaries, or optical illumination. The invention can be used as an opening switch in large scale pulsed-power systems. However, the switch can also be used in compact pulsed-power systems (e.g., as drivers for high power microwave systems), as passive fault limiters for high voltage dc (HVDC) systems, and/or in other high power applications.
Claims
1. A ferroelectric opening switch, comprising: a ferroelectric material comprising at least one crystal having a permanent electric dipole determined by the crystallographic symmetry of the ferroelectric material and a having plurality of nucleation sites; and a voltage source for applying an electric field to the ferroelectric material; wherein polarization reversal of the electric dipoles is nucleated at the nucleation sites when the electric field is applied, thereby changing current flow in the switch.
2. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 1, wherein the ferroelectric material comprises BaTiO.sub.3, Pb(Zr,Ti)O.sub.3, LiNbO.sub.3, or LiTaO.sub.3.
3. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 1, wherein the applied electric field is below the coercive field of the ferroelectric material.
4. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 1, wherein the ferroelectric material comprises a single crystal.
5. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 4, wherein the plurality of nucleation sites comprise a surface texture.
6. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 5, wherein the surface texture comprises indents.
7. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 1, wherein the ferroelectric material comprises a polycrystalline ceramic.
8. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 7, wherein the plurality of nucleation sites comprise grain boundaries.
9. The ferroelectric opening switch, further comprising a light source for illuminating the ferroelectric material, wherein absorbed photons create free charges optically within the ferroelectric material, thereby nucleating the polarization reversal.
10. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 9, wherein the light source has energy below the band gap of the ferroelectric material.
11. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 10, wherein the light source comprises a laser and wherein the laser establishes an interference pattern, thereby providing the plurality of nucleation sites within the ferroelectric material.
12. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 9, wherein the light source has energy above the band gap of the ferroelectric material.
13. The ferroelectric opening switch of claim 12, wherein the light source comprises a laser or flash lamp and wherein the plurality of nucleation sites are limited to the near-surface region of the ferroelectric material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The detailed description will refer to the following drawings, wherein like elements are referred to by like numbers.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(8) Prior work has demonstrated the promise of an opening switch based upon the polarization reversal of a ferroelectric material, i.e., a ferroelectric opening switch (FEOS), but has revealed limitations associated with reliable and repeatable control of material performance. The present invention provides a method for controlling the dynamic material response to make FEOS technology feasible.
(9) Certain classes of dielectric materials possess permanent electrical dipoles (P.sub.s) even in the absence of an externally applied electric field. In crystalline ceramics, the possible orientations of these permanent dipoles are limited to distinct and thermodynamically equivalent directions as determined by the symmetry of the crystal. Under application of an external electric field, these permanent dipoles can be made to switch from one orientation to another, resulting in polarization switching, as shown in
(10) As shown in
(11) Ferroelectric materials that have been proposed for use as an opening switch take advantage of the nonlinearity in permittivity K during switching from one polarization state to another (e.g., from P.sub.r to +P.sub.s under a positive electric field). P.sub.s and P.sub.r are important parameters for such operation because they relate directly to the amount of charge transferred during switching. See G. H. Rim et al., Fast High Voltage Pulse Generation Using Nonlinear Capacitors, IEEE International Pulsed Conference, 1460-1463 (1999); G. H. Rim et al., Nanosecond Pulse Generation with Nonlinear Capacitors and Magnetic Power Compression, IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference (2002); and K. Reed et al., Ferroelectric Opening Switches for Large-Scale Pulsed Power Drivers, SAND2009-7527 (2009). Even more important for efficient and effective FEOS operation is the ratio in effective permittivity between the dynamic switching state (K.sub.switch) and the fully-saturated state (K.sub.sat, at large-magnitude E values). Since the permittivity at any point is directly proportional to the local slope on the hysteresis loop and E.sub.c is defined as the point at which the hysteresis loop crosses the P=0 axis, K.sub.switch can be approximated as K at E.sub.c. The coercive field is also important because the larger the field required to reverse polarization, the less efficient the opening switch.
(12) The main advantages of FEOS technology lie in the increased current density and transfer efficiency compared to semiconductor switches, greater potential repetition rates and lifetimes compared to plasma and related switches, and better impedance match to inductive loads than achievable with closing switches. See K. Reed et al., Ferroelectric Opening Switches for Large-Scale Pulsed Power Drivers, SAND2009-7527 (2009). All of these advantages depend upon being able to controlor at least predictably reproducea high-rate dynamic polarization reversal process. Absent extrinsic factors, however, the nucleation that initiates polarization reversal is a classic stochastic process.
(13) The present invention relies on nucleation to achieve the rapid polarization reversal of interest for FEOS applications and, in particular, recognizes surface texture or ceramic grain boundaries as effective nucleation sites for polarization reversal or uses optical photons to nucleate switching in a ferroelectric crystal. In the description below, single crystal lithium tantalate (LiTaO.sub.3) is used as an exemplary ferroelectric material to demonstrate the effect of nucleation on macroscopic polarization switching times via both experiment and simulation using a phase field model. Importantly, LiTaO.sub.3 in single crystal form has only two possible polarization directions, and therefore exhibits only 180 (non-ferroelastic) domain walls. However, other ferroelectric materials, such as barium titanate (BaTiO.sub.3), lithium niobate (LiNbO.sub.3), lead zirconate titanate (Pb(Zr,Ti)O.sub.3, or other varieties of these piezoelectric materials, can also be used with the invention.
(14) Starting with three pristine wafers of LiTaO.sub.3 exhibiting no optically-visible defects or blemishes on the surface or within the bulk, as shown in
(15) These results were supported by phase field modeling of an analogous situation in which field-enhancing electrode protrusions were introduced onto the surface of a LiTaO.sub.3 single crystal slab.
(16) Earlier work by the inventors showed that polycrystalline ferroelectrics based on BaTiO.sub.3 or Pb(Zr,Ti)O.sub.3 can also function as ferroelectric opening switches. See K. Reed et al., Ferroelectric Opening Switches for Large-Scale Pulsed Power Drivers, SAND2009-7527 (2009). Polycrystalline samples included a high density of native nucleation sites, presumably grain boundaries. To make a direct comparison of switching times of samples of nominally identical chemistry, polarization reversal characteristics were compared for commercial BaTiO.sub.3 single crystals as well as in-house-fabricated polycrystalline BaTiO.sub.3 ceramics. Further, to eliminate sample texture as an uncontrolled variable (the single crystals were fully (001) oriented and the standard polycrystalline ceramic samples were randomly-oriented), polycrystalline BaTiO.sub.3 samples were fabricated with a high degree of bulk texture via a template grain growth (TGG) process. See G. L. Brennecka et al., Grain Size and Texture Effects on Polarization Reversal Dynamics in BaTiO.sub.3 under High Power Drive Conditions, presented at 23.sup.rd Int. Sym. on Applications of Ferroelectrics, May 12-16, 2014; and W. Meier et al., Highly Textured BaTiO.sub.3 via Templated Grain Growth and Resulting Polarization Reversal Dynamics, J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 99(3), 922 (2016).
(17) Comparing the switching characteristics of the BaTiO.sub.3 samples, as shown in
(18) Use of single crystal ferroelectrics such as LiTaO.sub.3 for FEOS applications is attractive for a number of reasons described elsewhere, but as demonstrated above, the dynamic response of such materials is nucleation limited. See K. Reed et al., Ferroelectric Opening Switches for Large-Scale Pulsed Power Drivers, SAND2009-7527 (2009). Macroscopic polarization reversal times, however, can be shortened by increasing nucleation density. In polycrystalline samples, a large nucleation density results from the presence of a large number of grain boundaries within the bulk of the body. One possible approach to initiating bulk nucleation within a single crystal that lacks such grain boundaries is to create free charges (i.e., electron-hole pairs) optically within the bulk of the material. This approach enables precise control of nucleation density and therefore switching dynamics in an already fabricated material that can be used as an opening switch. Grain boundary density in a material is set during initial fabrication and processing and cannot be changed during operation; however, the used of optically initiated nucleation sites provides external control of nucleation density that can be adjusted during operation without having to replace the ferroelectric material with one of a different grain size. Additionally, since the optically-induced nucleation is not associated with structural defects, it does not result in performance-degrading domain wall pinning as seen in the TGG samples shown in
(19) A setup was constructed to demonstrate proof of optical nucleation of ferroelectric switching in single crystal LiTaO.sub.3. The sample was coated with indium-tin-oxide (ITO) electrodes to enable a voltage to be applied to the crystal. With the setup, just above band gap light was used blanket illuminate a surface to effectively trigger polarization reversal at voltages below E.sub.c. Representative results are shown in
(20) A birefringence laser pattern can be used to pattern a domain structure within an optically transparent ferroelectric. Therefore, an embodiment of the invention involves establishing an interference pattern within the bulk of a ferroelectric material (either a single crystal or a sintered polycrystalline ceramic) using a laser of energy below the band gap of the ferroelectric in order to minimize absorption except at the foci where constructive interference of two split beams leads to high optical powers and two-photon absorption.
(21) The present invention has been described as a ferroelectric opening switch. It will be understood that the above description is merely illustrative of the applications of the principles of the present invention, the scope of which is to be determined by the claims viewed in light of the specification. Other variants and modifications of the invention will be apparent to those of skill in the art.