Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate

Piezoelectricity is the ability of certain, non-conductive, materials to generate an electrical charge when pressure is applied to them. The voltage produced is directly proportional to the applied stress. The amount of charge generated can depend on, for example, the applied strain rate or the temp...

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Main Author: Khan, Amnah Sehar
Other Authors: Proud, William
Published: Imperial College London 2016
Subjects:
537
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.718422
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7184222018-10-09T03:26:01ZElectromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rateKhan, Amnah SeharProud, William2016Piezoelectricity is the ability of certain, non-conductive, materials to generate an electrical charge when pressure is applied to them. The voltage produced is directly proportional to the applied stress. The amount of charge generated can depend on, for example, the applied strain rate or the temperature. Due to this ability, piezoceramics, such as PZT ceramics, find use in many different applications, primarily as sensors or actuators. Sensors work by detecting pressure, mechanically deforming and thus producing a voltage. Actuators, on the other hand, mechanically deform upon application of an electric field. To develop a better understanding of the piezoelectric ceramic lead zirconate titanate (PZT) 95/5, a range of studies including varying temperatures, porosities, and strain rates have been conducted. The effects on the voltage output and failure of poled PZT samples of different porosities have been investigated using different compressive strain rates (10^-4 – 10^4 s^-1), reached with quasi-static loading equipment, drop-weight towers, and Split Hopkinson Pressure Bars (SHPBs). The main cylindrical specimens were of 4.4 mm diameter, thickness 0.8 - 4.4 mm, and density 7.3 - 8.3 g cm^-3. The temperature range of -20°C to +80°C was achieved using purpose-built environmental chambers. The resulting stress-strain relationships are compared; all the samples ultimately displaying a brittle response at failure [1]. To support this work, ideal geometric specimen sizes were identified for the different types of loading experiment, by carrying out a range of strain-rate compression experiments on well-studied materials such as aluminium and copper. In addition, different experimental platforms were successfully developed in order to reach non-ambient temperatures in the Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar experiments. Finally, as piezoceramics, when used in real world applications, are often coated in protective layers of polymer, several different types of industrial polymer have been characterised across the full range of strain rates and temperatures.537Imperial College Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.718422http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/48495Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 537
spellingShingle 537
Khan, Amnah Sehar
Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
description Piezoelectricity is the ability of certain, non-conductive, materials to generate an electrical charge when pressure is applied to them. The voltage produced is directly proportional to the applied stress. The amount of charge generated can depend on, for example, the applied strain rate or the temperature. Due to this ability, piezoceramics, such as PZT ceramics, find use in many different applications, primarily as sensors or actuators. Sensors work by detecting pressure, mechanically deforming and thus producing a voltage. Actuators, on the other hand, mechanically deform upon application of an electric field. To develop a better understanding of the piezoelectric ceramic lead zirconate titanate (PZT) 95/5, a range of studies including varying temperatures, porosities, and strain rates have been conducted. The effects on the voltage output and failure of poled PZT samples of different porosities have been investigated using different compressive strain rates (10^-4 – 10^4 s^-1), reached with quasi-static loading equipment, drop-weight towers, and Split Hopkinson Pressure Bars (SHPBs). The main cylindrical specimens were of 4.4 mm diameter, thickness 0.8 - 4.4 mm, and density 7.3 - 8.3 g cm^-3. The temperature range of -20°C to +80°C was achieved using purpose-built environmental chambers. The resulting stress-strain relationships are compared; all the samples ultimately displaying a brittle response at failure [1]. To support this work, ideal geometric specimen sizes were identified for the different types of loading experiment, by carrying out a range of strain-rate compression experiments on well-studied materials such as aluminium and copper. In addition, different experimental platforms were successfully developed in order to reach non-ambient temperatures in the Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar experiments. Finally, as piezoceramics, when used in real world applications, are often coated in protective layers of polymer, several different types of industrial polymer have been characterised across the full range of strain rates and temperatures.
author2 Proud, William
author_facet Proud, William
Khan, Amnah Sehar
author Khan, Amnah Sehar
author_sort Khan, Amnah Sehar
title Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
title_short Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
title_full Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
title_fullStr Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
title_full_unstemmed Electromechanical response of bulk PZT 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
title_sort electromechanical response of bulk pzt 95/5 and associated polymers across temperature and strain rate
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.718422
work_keys_str_mv AT khanamnahsehar electromechanicalresponseofbulkpzt955andassociatedpolymersacrosstemperatureandstrainrate
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