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Journal Article

Shape-memory effect in twisted ferroic nanocomposites

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Han,  Hyeon       
Nano-Systems from Ions, Spins and Electrons, Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Kim, D., Kim, M., Reidt, S., Han, H., Baghizadeh, A., Zeng, P., et al. (2023). Shape-memory effect in twisted ferroic nanocomposites. Nature Communications, 14: 750. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-36274-w.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000C-B7B6-8
Abstract
The shape recovery ability of shape-memory alloys vanishes below a critical size (~50 nm), which prevents their practical applications at the nanoscale. In contrast, ferroic materials, even when scaled down to dimensions of a few nanometers, exhibit actuation strain through domain switching, though the generated strain is modest (~1%). Here, we develop freestanding twisted architectures of nanoscale ferroic oxides showing shape-memory effect with a giant recoverable strain (>8%). The twisted geometrical design amplifies the strain generated during ferroelectric domain switching, which cannot be achieved in bulk ceramics or substrate-bonded thin films. The twisted ferroic nanocomposites allow us to overcome the size limitations in traditional shape-memory alloys and open new avenues in engineering large-stroke shape-memory materials for small-scale actuating devices such as nanorobots and artificial muscle fibrils.