4.7 Article

Solid-state synthesis of multicomponent equiatomic rare-earth oxides

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY
Volume 103, Issue 4, Pages 2908-2918

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jace.16971

Keywords

phase transformations; rare earths; reaction sintering

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR1846935]
  2. Center of Materials Processing, University of Tennessee

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Phase formation in multicomponent rare-earth oxides is determined by a combination of composition, sintering atmosphere, and cooling rate. Polycrystalline ceramics comprising various combinations of Ce, Gd, La, Nd, Pr, Sm, and Y oxides in equiatomic proportions were synthesized using solid-state sintering. The effects of composition, sintering atmosphere, and cooling rate on phase formation were investigated. Single cubic or monoclinic structures were obtained with a slow cooling of 3.3 degrees C/min, confirming that rare-earth oxides follow a different structure stabilization process than transition metal high-entropy oxides. In an oxidizing atmosphere, both Ce and Pr induce a cubic structure, while only Ce plays that role in an inert or reducing atmosphere. Samples without Ce or Pr develop a single monoclinic structure. The structures formed at initial synthesis may be converted to a different one, when the ceramics are annealed in an additional atmosphere. Phase evolution of a five-cation composition was also studied as a function of sintering temperature. The binary oxides used as raw materials completely dissolve into a single cubic structure at 1450 degrees C in air.

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