Multiskalen-Domänenanalyse in kommerziellen Piezokeramiken für Aktorik
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The performance and reliability of multilayer piezoelectric actuators (MPA) for fuel injection in modern automotive systems is crucial to produce high-efficiency engines with low fuel consumption. These devices are built as multilayer metal-ceramic composites in order to maximise the piezoelectric response by applying low voltage. This response is induced by the alignment of ferroelectric domains in the ceramic under the effect of electrical and/or mechanical fields (ferroelectric and ferroelastic domain switching, respectively). MPAs, however, suffer from reliability problems: Since cracks might be induced during production, the effect of cyclic electrical, mechanical and thermal loading not only degrades the performance, but also threatens the survival of the device by crack propagation. The risk of failure is enhanced due to the mechanical stress produced by strain mismatch between the active (i.e. electrically driven) and passive (i.e. not electrically driven) zones, and also due to the clamping between the ceramic and metal layers. Although external mechanical and thermal loads may disrupt the preferential domain orientation (worsening the in- service response), domain switching ahead of cracks can increase toughening (providing a way to design devices with longer lifetime), and ad-hoc domain engineering could enhance the overall performance. It is thus mandatory to investigate the domain structure in several areas of the layered structure and on several length scales. Macro- scale analyses are needed to correlate domains to overall material properties (which are a function of the average crystallite response). Micro-scale analyses are needed to assess the structures in regions crucial for the reliability of the device (i.e. the border between active and passive zones, the tip of electrodes, the areas around cracks, etc.). Within our project, we will establish an unprecedented combination of methods to investigate the crystallographic (domain) orientation distribution in piezoceramics for commercial actuators on several length scales (macro-, micro- and nanoscale). We will perform this on materials that have been conditioned with different levels of mechanical stress and temperature, concentrating especially on critical areas in MPAs. We will measure also the macroscopic piezoelectric response, and develop models of domain distribution to aid the interpretation of the experimental results. This combination of local structure investigation, measurement of macroscopic properties and modelling will allow bridging the link between microscopic crystallographic orientation and macroscopic properties of the device. This will help also explaining the influence of external loads on MPAs in terms of the local structural parameters. This novel understanding is a crucial step to design piezoelectric devices with tailored domain structures in order to maximise their performance under varied temperatures. It is therefore expected that the research carried out here will constitute a significant breakthrough in the field of piezoceramics.
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