4.5 Article

Defect chemistry and transport properties of BaxCe0.85M0.15O3-δ

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH
Volume 19, Issue 8, Pages 2366-2376

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1557/JMR.2004.0302

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The site-incorporation mechanism of M3+ dopants into A(2+)B(4+)O(3) perovskites controls the overall defect chemistry and thus their transport properties. For charge-balance reasons, incorporation onto the A(2+)-site would require the creation of negatively charged point defects (such as cation vacancies), whereas incorporation onto the B4+-site is accompanied by the generation of positively charged defects, typically oxygen vacancies. Oxygen-vacancy content, in turn, is relevant to proton-conducting oxides in which protons are introduced via the dissolution of hydroxyl ions at vacant oxygen sites. We propose here, on the basis of x-ray powder diffraction studies, electron microscopy, chemical analysis, thermal gravimetric analysis, and alternating current impedance spectroscopy, that nominally B-site doped barium cerate can exhibit dopant partitioning as a consequence of barium evaporation at elevated temperatures. Such partitioning and the presence of significant dopant concentrations on the A-site negatively impact proton conductivity. Specific materials examined are BaxCe0.85M0.15O3-delta (x = 0.85 - 1.20; M = Nd, Gd, Yb). The compositional limits for the maximum A-site incorporation are experimentally determined to be: (Ba0.919Nd0.081)(Ce0.919Nd0.081)O-3, (Ba0.974Gd0.026)(Ce0.872Gd0.128)O-2.875, and Ba(Ce0.85Yb0.15)O-2.925. As a consequence of the greater ability of larger cations to exist on the Ba site, the H2O adsorption and proton conductivities of large-cation doped barium cerates are lower than those of small-cation doped analogs.

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