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Primary pyroelectric effect

Since pyroelectric materials are polar, they are also piezoelectric, and the strain resulting from thermal expansion will result in the development of a surface charge. However, this is a small effect that seldom exceeds 10% of the primary pyroelectric effect. [Pg.412]

The primary pyroelectric effect (i.e. at constant volume) is extremely small. EXAMPLE. Tourmaline, crystal class 3m. [Pg.191]

Therefore the pyroelectric coefficient at constant mechanical stress (J) is equal to the sum of two terms. First term in Eq. (5.22) represents the pyroelectric coefficient at constant strain - so called primary pyroelectric effect. Pyroelectric coefficient pf describes the electric displacement as a function of the temperature change for the sample with compensated thermal expansion. Corresponding pyroelectric coefficient... [Pg.77]

The pyroelectric effect that is normally observed in a crystal is, in fact, composed of two separate effects called the primary (or true) pyroelectric effect and the secondary pyroelectric effect. If a crystal is fixed so that its size is constant as the temperature changes, the primary effect is measured. Normally, though, a crystal is unconstrained. An additional pyroelectric effect will now be measured, the secondary pyroelectric effect, caused by strains in the crystal produced by the thermal change. In general, the secondary effect is much greater than the primary effect, but both are utilised in devices. [Pg.349]

Note that besides the primary pyroeffect contribution, determined by polarization temperature variations, there can be the contributions from secondary and ternary pyroelectric effects. Latter effects are due to thermal expansion and inhomogeneous... [Pg.49]

Primary as well as secondary pyroelectric effects are not allowed in polar-neutral crystals due to the symmetry. We can demonstrate this situation on secondary pyroelectric effects for a-quartz, where the thermal expansion as well as piezoelectric tensor is non-zero. Using the form of material tensors for thermal expansion and piezoelectricity for symmetry class 32 we can get... [Pg.78]

Ye C, Tamagawa T, Polla DL (1991) Experimental studies on primary and secondary pyroelectric effects in Pb(Zr, Tij x,) , PbTiOj, and ZnO thin films. J Appl Phys 70(10) 5538-5543 Zampiceni E, Comini E, Faglia G, Sberveglieri G, Kaciulis S, Pandolfi L, Viticoli S (2003) Composition influence on the properties of sputtered Sn-W-0 films. Sens Actuators B 89 225-231 Zhang J-G, Benson DK, Tracy CE, Deb SK, Czanderna AW, Bechinger C (1996) Electrochromic mechanism in a-WO films. J Electrochem Soc 24 251-259... [Pg.116]

The sample preparation for a bulk pyroelectric measurement is very similar to what is required for a bulk piezoelectric measurement, namely a well-sintered ceramic disc that has been electrically poled. Determining the pyroelectric coefficient may be divided into two groups - the measurement of the pyroelectric current and the measurement of the charge. We will describe measurement techniques for both groups. In addition, the pyroelectric effect can be subdivided into primary and secondary effects. The primary effect is observed when the material is rigidly clamped under a constant strain to prevent any thermal expansion or contraction. Secondary effects occur when the material is permitted to deform, i.e. the material is under constant stress. Thermal expansion results in a strain that changes the spontaneous polarisation, attributable to the piezoelectric effect. Thus the secondary pyroelectric effect includes contributions caused by piezoelectricity. Exclusively measuring the pyroelectric coefficient under constant strain is experimentally very difficult. What is usually experimentally measured is the total pyroelectric effect exhibited by the material - the sum of the primary and secondary effects. [Pg.26]

Nix et al. [84] have also conducted a aeries of experiments which show that not all the pyroelectric effect can be accounted for on the basis of secondary pyroelectricity. They measured the piezoelectric coefficients and calculated the secondary pyroelectric coefficient using Eq. (19). They found that secondary pyroelectricity could account frw only 10% to 60% of the total pyroelectric effect. The variations in the experimental results were attributed to variations in sample processing, and they concluded that the primary contribution varied from 90% to 40% depending on the method of sample preparatioo. [Pg.211]


See other pages where Primary pyroelectric effect is mentioned: [Pg.289]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.2896]    [Pg.2896]    [Pg.2896]    [Pg.790]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.1759]    [Pg.1759]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.76]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.77 ]




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