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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

An investigation of interface reaction between BaTiO3 and SrTiO3

Siao, Cyuan-You 05 August 2008 (has links)
The pseudo-binary system of BaTiO3-SrTiO3 ceramics offering potential applications in the electronic industry, particularly for the passive components, has been studied for its diffuse phase transition over the temperature range of +150oC and -50oC. This research concentrating on the interdiffusion between two sintered layers of such perovskite is a continuation of study, conducted by this author¡¦s group over the past years. Two-layer BaTiO3-SrTiO3 stacks were sintered at 1300oC and annealed for various time periods to investigate if and how the interdiffusion occurs across the BaTiO3-SrTiO3 interface. Optical microscopy reveals an interface layer consisting of polytitanate second phases, which appear to be large, chunky grains initially. Both results obtained from X-ray diffractometry and micro-chemical analysis using the energy-dispersive spectrometry, equipped with the scanning electron microscopy, suggest that the second phases are: Ba4Ti13O30, Ba2Ti9O20, Ba6Ti17O40 and BaTi2O5. These polytitanates are produced from the solid-state reaction between BaTiO3 and TiO2, which is left behind in the BaTiO3 layer when Ba2+ being the faster diffusion A-site cation have moved across into the SrTiO3 layer in a significantly higher content. The interface phases grow progressively to a coherent second-phase layer upon prolonged annealing for 100 h. It is revealed by the transmission electron microscopy that residual pores, similar to the Kirkendall type in the classical Cu-Zn diffusion couple, generated at ~100 £gm away from the interface and located in the BaTiO3 layer. This is attributed to the significantly different lattice diffusivities between two A-cations, i.e. Ba2+ being faster than Sr2+ by approximately three times, with A-site vacancies ( ) created in the grains of the BaTiO3 layer. Together with B-site cation vacancy ( ) and oxygen vacancy ( ), similar to the prismatic loops formed in quenched aluminium, condensation of vacancies via a reverse Schottky defect reaction has formed such Kirkendall-like pores within BaTiO3 grains. Interdiffusion has resulted in forming the solid solutions of (Ba,Sr)TiO3, with Sr2+ being solute cation, and (Sr,Ba)TiO3, with Ba2+ being solute cation, in the initial layers, respectively, and the characteristic core-shell grains responsible for the diffuse-phase transition. A mechanism of how cation diffusion produces the core-shell grains in both layers, modified from Bow (1990) and Liu (1991), is proposed.
2

Chemical Characterisation Of The Surfaces And Interfaces Of Barium Titanate And Related Electronic Ceramics

Kumar, Sanjiv 01 1900 (has links)
This thesis deals with the investigations on the atomic composition, chemical surface states and microstructural features of barium titanate and other electronic ceramics namely barium polytitantes, calcium manganites and magnesium calcium titanate by surface analytical techniques. After presenting a brief introduction on the ceramic materials studied in terms of their crystal structures, electrical properties, nonstoichiometry and interfacial characteristics, the thesis describes the synthesis of the ceramics and the methodology of the different surface analytical techniques utilized such as backscattering spectrometry (BS), an ion beam analysis (IBA) technique, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). The XPS investigations on the chemical surface states of polycrystalline barium titanate having well-defined electrical characteristics reveal the prevalence of Ba in two distinct chemical environments : the one corresponding to the lower binding energy is related to the dielectric while the other having higher binding energy is correlated to semiconducting properties of the ceramics. Processes such as abrasion or polishing make the surfaces more reactive and susceptible to atmospheric contamination. Sputter cleaning causes surface modification leading to changes in the Ba (3d) and Ti (2p) spectra. Studies on the surface atomic composition by BS and microstructural features of doped barium titanate ceramics reveal their interfacial characteristics in terms segregation of dopants or metal ion constituents. Surfaces of these ceramics exhibit cationic as well as anionic nonstoichiometry depending on the processing steps involved. Ceramics synthesized by oxalate precursor route are Ti-rich while those prepared by gel-to-crystallite method are Ba-rich. These are correlated to the chemical processes and background impurities which in turn control the microstructures. Barium titanate substitued with > 1 at. % Mn are deficient in oxygen and exist as the hexagonal polymorph. Acceptors segregate at the grain boundaries accompanied by the enrichment of Ti leading to PTCR or GBLC characteristics. The oxygen nonstoichiometry prevailing in the surface regions of differently processed calcium manganites is investigated by way of depth profile measurements involving 16O(a,a) 16O resonant scattering. These studies reveal extensive compositional heterogeneity across the surface layers particularly in the manganite specimens annealed in lower po2 leading to the stabilization of brownmillerite phase. Two of the microwave dielectric ceramics namely dibarium nona-titanate and barium tetra-titanate with suitable variations in Ba:Ti ratios have been synthesized by the carbonate-gel precipitation. The corresponding dense ceramics have high permittivity (~ 52) and low temperature coefficient of permittivity (TCK ~ 5 ppm /0C). Extensive miscibility between the ilmenite-type MgTiO3 and perovskite-type CaTiO3 over a wide compositional range is brought about by the simultaneous equivalent substitution of Al3+ + La3+. The resulting (Mg1-(x+y)CaxLay)(Ti1-yAly)O3 ceramics exhibit improved microwave dielectric properties by way of high permittivity, low TCK and high quality factor. The microarea elemental distribution and chemical surface state studies reveal the complexity in the Mg/Ca distribution and its correlation with the solid state miscibility as well as dielectric properties. The discontinuous changes in the local site symmetry of the cationic substituents in these ceramics have been investigated by the photoluminescence spectra using Pr3+ as the emission probe.

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