Specifically, the Japanese researchers worked with perovskite oxynitrides, which are easily fabricated crystals. The main challenge the researchers faced was to make ceramics made from perovskites denser in order to improve their insulating properties. To achieve this, they first applied intense heat (1723 Kelvin) to the material using a technique called sintering. Then they annealed the material to remove any potential stresses, by heating it with flowing ammonia at 1223 Kelvin and then allowing it to slowly cool.
After this treatment, the researchers found that the surface of the material displayed a property called “ferroelectricity,” which proves for the first time that the perovskite oxynitride is a dielectric material that could be used for multi-layered ceramic capacitors. This research, which is described in the journal Chemistry of Materials, could be used to make non-hazardous capacitors for everything from consumer electronic devices to telecommunications transmitters.