4.6 Article

Tuning the melting point and phase stability of rare-earth oxides to facilitate their crystal growth from the melt

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED CERAMICS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages 1479-1490

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40145-022-0625-z

Keywords

high-entropy oxides; crystallography; neutron diffraction; crystal growth

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR 1846935]
  2. Center for Materials Processing, The University of Tennessee

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The challenge of growing rare-earth sesquioxide crystals can be overcome by tailoring their structural stability and melting point. This study contributes to the advancement of crystal growth of high-entropy oxides.
The challenge of growing rare-earth (RE) sesquioxide crystals can be overcome by tailoring their structural stability and melting point via composition engineering. This work contributes to the advancement of the field of crystal growth of high-entropy oxides. A compound with only small REs (Lu,Y,Ho,Yb,Er)(2)O-3 maintains a cubic C-type structure upon cooling from the melt, as observed via in-situ high-temperature neutron diffraction on aerodynamically levitated samples. On the other hand, a compound with a mixture of small and large REs (Lu,Y,Ho,Nd,La)(2)O-3 crystallizes as a mixture of a primary C-type phase with an unstable secondary phase. Crystals of compositions (Lu,Y,Ho,Nd,La)(2)O-3 and (Lu,Y,Gd,Nd,La)(2)O-3 were grown by the micro-pulling-down (mPD) method with a single monoclinic B-type phase, while a powder of (Lu,Y,Ho,Yb,Er)(2)O-3 did not melt at the maximum operating temperature of an iridium-rhenium crucible. The minimization of the melting point of the two grown crystals is attributed to the mismatch in cation sizes. The electron probe microanalysis reveals that the general element segregation behavior in the crystals depends on the composition.

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