“…Such a chemical disorder is known to be a reason to give rise to quenched random electric fields [2], which in turn is a reason of nucleation of polar nanoregions (PNRs) [3]. It is well documented that in the case of canonical RFEs the PNRs nucleate below the high-lying Burns temperature, start to grow below intermediate temperature, provide a huge, smeared and frequency-dependent maximum of the dielectric constant, ε, at temperature T m [4][5][6], and freeze below a glass temperature, T g [6], into a mesoscopic dipolar glass ground state [7], as the temperature decreases. While, in the case of non-canonical RFEs with FEs doping, the freezing temperature is replaced by the Curie temperature, T c , of a spontaneous FE phase transition, as the temperature decreases [1,6].…”