Important Ferroelectric Discovery Made

Berkeley Lab researchers and the University of California have resolved the high-voltage mystery for one ferroelectric material.

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An Electronic Bucket Brigade Could Boost Solar Cell Voltages

If solar cells could generate higher voltages when sunlight falls on them, they’d produce more electrical power more efficiently. For over half a century scientists have known that ferroelectrics, materials whose atomic structure allows them to have an overall electrical polarization, can develop very high photovoltages under illumination. Until now, no one has figured out exactly how this photovoltaic process occurs.

Now a team of researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California at Berkeley has resolved the high-voltage mystery for one ferroelectric material and determined that the same principle should be at work in all similar materials. The team’s results are published in Physical Review Letters.

“We worked with very thin films of bismuth ferrite, or BFO, grown in the laboratory of our colleague Ramamoorthy Ramesh,” says Joel Ager of Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division (MSD), who led the research effort. “These thin films have regions – called domains – where the electrical polarization points in different directions. Ramesh’s group is able to make film with exquisite control over this domain structure.”

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