Quan Yi, Xing Jie, Fei Chunlong, Tan Zhi, Sun Yajun, Cheng Yuan, Zhao Tianlong, Sun Xinhao, Zhao Jinyan, Zhang Junshan, Dong Guangzhi, Ren Wei, Yang Yintang, Zhu Jianguo
Faculty of Intergrated Circuit, Xidian University, Xi'an 710071, China.
College of Materials Science and Engineering, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610064, China.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2025 Apr 2;17(13):19587-19595. doi: 10.1021/acsami.4c21200. Epub 2025 Mar 19.
To advance the development of potassium sodium niobate (KNN)-based materials, devices, and their associated applications, this study introduces a collaborative approach to the optimization of materials and devices for wide-temperature, high-resolution nondestructive testing (NDT) imaging. This is achieved through the integration of graded lead-free KNN-based ceramics and wide-temperature-focused ultrasonic transducers. The graded KNN ceramics, featuring a coexistence of orthorhombic-tetragonal, rhombohedral-orthorhombic-tetragonal, and rhombohedral-tetragonal (O-T/R-O-T/R-T) crystalline phases, were engineered to enhance both thermal stability and piezoelectric performance. The - deviation of the piezoelectric constant for graded KNN-based ceramics remains below 3.5% at 140 °C. Ultrasonic transducers capable of operating across a wide temperature range were designed and fabricated by using these graded KNN ceramics. The transducers demonstrated robust thermal stability and high-resolution imaging performance within a temperature range of 30 to 120 °C. C-scan images obtained across this temperature spectrum further illustrated their potential for NDT applications in diverse thermal environments. This study marks a significant breakthrough in the field of wide-temperature KNN-based ultrasonic transducers, as it indicates the first successful demonstration of imaging capabilities at temperatures exceeding 100 °C.