Publication Date:
2016-06-23
Description:
Strontium barium niobate (SBN) is a tungsten bronze family ferroelectric which shows promising thermoelectric properties under reducing conditions. It is found here that the enhanced electrical conductivity of oxygen-deficient SBN correlates with the formation of a NbO 2 secondary phase. The effects of the reducing environment and the NbO 2 phase formation are studied via a detailed defect chemistry analysis. Increasing amounts of the NbO 2 phase are accompanied by an interesting mechanism where the A-site occupancy of the SBN matrix increases. The resulting donor defects source the large carrier concentrations which cause the enhanced electrical conductivity necessary for thermoelectric performance. In investigation of the phase equilibria, it is found that a solid solution between (Sr 0.6 ,Ba 0.4 )Nb 2 O 6 and (Sr 0.6 ,Ba 0.4 ) 1.2 Nb 2 O 6 exists and that the A-site filling is found to occur at more modest reduction conditions in Sr- and Ba-rich compositions. Finally, thermogravimetric analysis of the reoxidation process is performed, and the results suggest that the A-site filling is compensated ionically. Not only do the presented results explain the enhanced electrical conductivity of oxygen-deficient strontium barium niobate but also modification of the site occupancies by reduction and reoxidation may widen the design space for property modification in tungsten bronze-structured materials in general.
Print ISSN:
0002-7820
Electronic ISSN:
1551-2916
Topics:
Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
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