1st Edition

Polar Electronic Materials

By Yuriy Poplavko, Victor Kazmirenko Copyright 2026
282 Pages 246 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

282 Pages 246 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Polar Electronic Materials  examines the complex and diverse manifestations of polar properties in electronic materials, presenting key concepts about their electrical, mechanical, and thermal effects. It explores the fundamental physics of polar materials through accessible models that explain unusual features of heat transfer, thermal expansion, and the interaction between polarization... Read more

1 Brief Overview of Polar Materials Properties  2 Features of the Electronic Properties of Polar Solids  3 Nature of Crystal Internal Polarity  4 Thermal Transport in Polar Materials  5 Thermal Expansion Peculiarities  6 Charge Transfer in Polar Materials  7 Conduction and Polarization Relationship  8 Electrically Induced Piezoelectricity  9 Induced Pyroelectricity  10 Dielectric Permittivity Nonlinearity and Controllability

Biography

Yuriy Poplavko serves as Professor at the Microelectronics Department of the National Technical University of Ukraine Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute. With over four decades of teaching experience in electronic materials science, he is recognized internationally for his pioneering work in the physics of ferroelectrics and dielectrics, particularly for developing microwave dielectric spectroscopy as a research method. He has mentored hundreds of students, supervised over 30 doctoral candidates, and has authored 13 books. He has delivered invited lectures internationally across North America, Europe, and Asia. Professor Poplavko holds Life Senior Member status in IEEE and has published extensively in leading journals in the field of polar materials and ferroelectrics.

Victor Kazmirenko serves as Associate Professor at the Electronic Engineering Department of National Technical University of Ukraine Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, Faculty of Electronics. He earned his Master of Electronics in 1999 and Candidate of Sciences degree (local PhD equivalent) in solid-state electronics in 2003. Dr. Kazmirenko worked as research fellow at Pohang University of Science & Technology, South Korea, from 2000 to 2002. He spent his early research years focusing on study of various dielectric materials at microwave frequencies. He maintains an active membership at IEEE and has contributed to numerous publications examining the properties and applications of polar materials in electronics.