Title: I. Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and its relatives
1Serge Nakhmanson
Self-polarization in ferroelectric polymers
I. Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and its
relatives a brief reminder II.
Polarization via maximally-localized Wannier
functions and why it is so good to study
polymers a brief reminder III. Projects a.
Self-polarization in individual polymer (and
copolymer) chains b. Self-polarization in PVDF
from a chain to a crystal c. Self-polarization in
PVDF/copolymer crystals IV. Conclusions
Collaborators Jerry Bernholc and Marco
Buongiorno Nardelli (NC State and ORNL)
2The nature of polarization in PVDF and its
relatives
Representatives polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF),
PVDF copolymers, odd
nylons, polyurea, etc.
PVDF copolymers
3Growth and manufacturing
Pictures from A. J. Lovinger, Science 1983
4Growth and manufacturing
Pictures from A. J. Lovinger, Science 1983
5Growth and manufacturing
PVDF grown approx. 50 crystalline, which
spoils its polar properties
- PVDF copolymers (with TrFE and TeFE)
- can be grown very (90-100) crystalline
- can be grown as thin films
- stay ferroelectric in films only a few Å thick
6What is available? Simple models for polarization
in PVDF
Experimental polarization for approx. 50
crystalline samples 0.05-0.076
C/m2 Empirical models (100 crystalline)
Polarization
(C/m2) Rigid dipoles (no dipole-dipole
interaction)
0.131 Mopsik and Broadhurst, JAP, 1975
Kakutani, J Polym Sci, 1970 0.22
Tashiro et al. Macromolecules 1980
0.140 Purvis and Taylor, PRB 1982, JAP 1983
0.086 Al-Jishi and Taylor, JAP 1985
0.127 Carbeck, Lacks and Rutledge, J Chem Phys,
1995 0.182
Nobody knows what these structural-unit dipoles
are and how they change
7ß-phase layout
Orthorhombic cell for ß-PVDF
- We will consider
- Chains 4 x unit or 8 x unit
- Crystalline systems
- 4 x chain with 4 units
- orthorhombic box 10x10x10 Å
Berry phase method with DFT/GGA P3 0.178 C/m2
8Polarization in polymers with Wannier functions
- Electronic polarization looks especially simple
when using Wannier functions
- Ionic polarization is also a simple sum
- Unlike in a typical Berry-phase calculation, we
can attach a dipole moment - to every structural unit
- Unlike in a typical Born-effective-charge
calculation for perovskite-type - materials (e.g., layer-by-layer
polarization), our analysis will be precise
- We use the simultaneous diagonalization
algorithm at G-point to compute - maximally-localized Wannier functions within
our real-space multigrid method - (GGA with non-local, norm-conserving
pseudopotentials) - See previous Serges talk for details
- See also Gygi, Fattebert, Schwegler, Comp. Phys.
Commun. 2003 - See E. L. Briggs, D. J. Sullivan and J.
Bernholc, PRB 1996 for the multigrid method
description
9Example Wannier functions in a ß-PVDF chain
10Example Wannier functions in a ß-PVDF chain
11Structural-unit dipole moments in individual
chains
A dipole moment of a structural unit in a chain
gives us a good natural starting value for a
dipole moment of a particular monomer
VDF
TrFE
TeFE
12Playing lego with structural units in a chain
13Playing lego with structural units in a chain
TeFE
14Playing lego with structural units in a chain
HTTH defect
15Playing lego with structural units in a chain
CHF-CHF
16- Some general observations for chains
- All kinds of interesting structural-unit dipole
arrangements along - a chain are possible (experimentalists can
not yet synthesize - polymers with such precision, though)
- Structural-unit dipoles on a chain like to keep
their identities, - i.e., they stay close to their natural
values and self-polarization - effects are weak
- Now we start packing chains into a crystal and
see what happens -
17Packing ß-PVDF chains into a crystal
noninteracting chains
weakly interacting chains
crystal
18Now we know why simple models disagree!
Empirical models (100 crystalline)
Polarization (C/m2) Rigid
dipoles (no dipole-dipole interaction)
0.131 Mopsik and
Broadhurst, JAP, 1975 Kakutani, J Polym Sci,
1970 0.22 Tashiro et al.
Macromolecules 1980
0.140 Purvis and
Taylor, PRB 1982, JAP 1983
0.086 Al-Jishi and
Taylor, JAP 1985
0.127 Carbeck,
Lacks and Rutledge, J Chem Phys, 1995
0.182
19On to more complex PVDF/copolymer crystals
- Now when we know what is going on with ß-PVDF
crystal, lets transform it into - a PVDF/copolymer crystal by turning some VDF
units into the copolymer ones - We will randomly change some VDF units into
TrFE or TeFE taking - into account that they dont like to sit
too close to each other - Volume relaxations will be important
- Our grid-based method can not do volume
relaxation, we use PWscf/USPPs - to get us to the volume that is about right
- Polarization will not be too sensitive to small
stress variations - We will monitor structure
- Volume and lattice constants
- Dihedral angles between units
- and polarization
- Dipole moment values in structural units will
they keep their identities? - Total polarization
- in our models as we change PVDF/copolymer
concentration
20This is how a relaxed model looks like
- Example P(VDF/TrFE) 62.5/37.5 model (6 units out
of 16 changed into TrFE)
Front view
Side view
21This is how a relaxed model looks like
- Example P(VDF/TrFE) 62.5/37.5 model (6 units out
of 16 changed into TrFE)
Front view
Top view
22Volume relaxation in PVDF/copolymer models
23Volume relaxation in PVDF/copolymer models
- Models expand mostly along 1 direction.
- There is no change along the direction of the
backbone. - Unit staggering is to blame?
24Dihedral unit-unit angle change
- Models expand mostly along 1 direction.
- There is no change along the direction of the
backbone. - Unit staggering is to blame?
25Dipole-moment change in VDF structural units
ß-PVDF crystal
ß-PVDF chain
- VDF unit dipole moments change a lot when
substantially diluted with less polar units - Close to linear drop in unit dipole strength with
changing concentration
26Dipole-moment change in copolymer structural units
TrFE chain
TeFE chain (nonpolar)
- Copolymer units become strongly polarized when
surrounded by more polar VDF units - Copolymer unit polarization decreases with
concentration but never goes back to its
natural chain value
27Total polarization in PVDF/copolymer models
ß-PVDF crystal
- Mapped out the whole polarization vs
concentration curve! - Linear to weakly parabolic (?) polarization drop
with concentration - Considering the estimative character of
calculations, remarkable agreement with
experimental data - Volume relaxation is important no agreement with
experiment at fixed volume
Tajitsu et al. Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 1987
Tasaka and Miyata, JAP 1985
28Conclusions
- Better understanding of polar polymers in chains
and crystals - The nature of dipole-dipole interaction in polar
polymer crystals is complex (although, the curves
are simple) - Information about the structure and polarization
in PVDF/copolymer compounds is now available. It
can be used as a guide to design materials with
preprogrammed properties. - We have the models now, so that we can do other
things with them