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research article

Recent Advances in Piezoelectric Materials for Electromechanical Transducer Applications

Li, Fei
•
Bell, Andrew
•
Damjanovic, Dragan  
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November 1, 2022
Ieee Transactions On Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics And Frequency Control

Ferroelectricity has made a huge impact on science and technology since Joseph Valasek (then a Ph.D. student at the University of Minnesota) discovered it in 1920, a little longer than 100 years ago. Whereas Dr. Valasek's original research was motivated by the need to develop seismic sensors, at present ferroelectric materials have been extensively studied for applications in high-energy capacitors, energy harvesting systems, night vision sensors, and electrocaloric solid cooling, and, of particular significance, the ferroelectrics are the material-of-choice for numerous electromechanical devices, including underwater acoustic transducers, medical diagnostic and therapeutic transducers, piezoelectric actuators, and ultrasonic motors, to name a few. The progress over the past 100 years has been enormous and it is ongoing: for example, the piezoelectric coefficient d of ferroelectrics has increased from a few pico-Coulomb per Newton to several thousand pico-Coulomb per Newton, which benefits all piezoelectric sensing and actuation devices.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1109/TUFFC.2022.3215791
Web of Science ID

WOS:000878172600004

Author(s)
Li, Fei
Bell, Andrew
Damjanovic, Dragan  
Jo, Wook
Ye, Zuo-Guang
Zhang, Shujun
Date Issued

2022-11-01

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC

Published in
Ieee Transactions On Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics And Frequency Control
Volume

69

Issue

11

Start page

2999

End page

3002

Subjects

Acoustics

•

Engineering, Electrical & Electronic

•

Acoustics

•

Engineering

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

Available on Infoscience
November 21, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/192491
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