Author, Subjects, Keywords

Cited Author

 

 
   » By Author or Editor
 » Browse Author by Alphabet
 » By Journal
 » By Subjects
 » Malaysian Journals
 » By Type
 » By Year
 » By Latest Additions
 
 
   » By Author
 » Top 20 Authors
 » Top 20 Article
 » Top Journal Cited
 » Top Article Cited
 » Journal Citation Statistics
 » Usage Since Sept 2007


 
 
 

Login | Create Account

Synthesis and Characterisation of Cubic Bi3Zn2Ta3O14 and its Related Divalent-Doped Pyrochlore Materials

Khaw, Chwin Chieh, and Tan, Kar Ban, and Zulkarnain Zainal, and Lee, Chnoong Kheng, (2009) Synthesis and Characterisation of Cubic Bi3Zn2Ta3O14 and its Related Divalent-Doped Pyrochlore Materials. Sains Malaysiana , 38 (3). pp. 387-393. ISSN 01266039

[img]
Preview
PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
685Kb

Official URL: http://pkukmweb.ukm.my/~jsm/pdf_files/SM-PDF-38-3-2009/14%20Khaw.pdf

Affiliations

Universiti Tun Abdul Razak, Faculty of Engineering and Science
Universiti Putra Malaysia, Faculty of Science, Dept. of Chemistry
Universiti Putra Malaysia, Faculty of Science, Dept. of Chemistry
Academy of Science Malaysia

Abstract

Bi3Zn2Ta3O14, ‘P’, was crystallised in a cubic unit cell with lattice parameter of a=10.5437 (9) Å. The material had permittivity, ε’, of around 58 and dielectric loss, tan δ, of 2.3 × 10-3 at 30oC, 1 MHz; temperature coefficient of capacitance (TCC) of -156 ppm/oC in the range of 30oC to 300oC at 1 MHz. Chemical doping was carried out at either A (Bi1.5Zn0.5-xMx)(Zn0.5Ta1.5)O7, or B site (Bi1.5Zn0.5)(Zn0.5-xMxTa1.5)O7 in search of better performance materials. Various divalent cations such as Cd2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Ni2+, Pb2+, and Cu2+ were used as dopants. Solid solutions formed were: Bi3Zn2-xCdxTa3O14 (0≤x≤0.5), Bi3Zn2-xMgxTa3O14(0≤x≤0.2), Bi3Zn2-xNixTa3O14 (0≤x≤0.4), Bi3Zn2-xPbxTa3O14 (0≤x≤0.3), Bi3Zn2-xCaxTa3O14 (0≤x≤0.3) and Bi3Zn2-xCuxTa3O14 (0≤x≤0.1). Electrical properties of the materials were investigated using impedance spectroscopy. Conductivities of the solid solutions were higher than that of the parent material Bi3Zn2Ta3O14. These doped materials exhibited similar behaviour as Bi3Zn2Ta3O14, showing a high degree of dispersion of permittivity at low frequencies (<1 kHz) and at temperatures above 500oC. Between 100 kHz and 1000 kHz, non-frequency dependence was observed in the range of 100 – 300oC. An increase in dielectric loss below 10 kHz was observed. Dielectric loss decreased with frequencies when temperature was above 500oC. Dielectric loss of all divalent cation doped materials was higher than that of the parent material; maximum permittivity value of 68 was recorded at x = 0.3 in Bi3Zn2-xCaxTa3O14. TCC obtained in this study had negative values; no obvious correlation between TCC and composition of the doped materials can be deduced.

Item Type:Journal
Keywords:Dielectric loss; permittivity, pyrochlore; temperature coefficient of capacitance
Subjects:Q Science, Computer Science
ID Code:8184

1. Cann, D.P., Randall, C.A. & Shrout, T.R. 1996. Investigation of the dielectric properties of bismuth pyrochlores. Solid State Communications 100: 529-534.

2. Du, H.L. & Yao, X. 2002. Dielectric relaxation characteristics of bismuth zinc niobate pyrochlores containing titanium. Physica B 324: 121-126.

3. Du, H.L. & Yao, X. 2003. Effects of Sr substitution on dielectric characteristics in Bi1.5ZnNb1.5O7 ceramics. Materials Science and Engineering 99(1-2): 437-440.

4. Mergen, A. & Lee, W.E. 1997. Crystal chemistry, thermal expansion and dielectric properties of (Bi1.5Zn0.5)(Sb1.5Zn0.5)O7 pyrochlore. Material Research Bulletin 32: 175-189.

5. Miles, G.C. & West, A.R. 2006. Pyrochlore phases in the system ZnO-Bi2O3-Sb2O5 : 1. Stoichiometries and phase equilibria. Journal of the American Ceramic Society 89: 1042-1046.

6. Nobre, M.A.L. & Lanfredi, S. 2001. Dielectric properties of Bi3Zn2Sb3O14 ceramics at high temperature. Materials Letters 47: 362-366.

7. Nobre, M.A.L. & Lanfredi, S. 2002. The effect of temperature on the electric conductivity property of Bi3Zn2Sb3O14 pyrochlore type phase. Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics 13: 235-238.

8. Nobre, M.A.L. & Lanfredi, S. 2003. Dielectric spectroscopy on Bi3Zn2Sb3O14 ceramic: an approach based on the complex impedance. Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids 64: 2457-2464.

9. Randall, C.A., Nino, J.C., Baker, A., Youn, H.J., Hitomi, A., Thayer, R., Edge, L.E., Sogabe, T., Anderson, D., Shrout, T.R., Trolier-Mckinstry, S. & Lanagan, M.T. 2003. Bi-pyrochlore and zirconolite dielectrics for integrated passive component applications. American Ceramic Society Bulletin: 9101-9108.

10. Shannon, R.D. 1976. Revised effective ionic radii and systematic studies of interatomic distances in halides and chalcogenides. Acta Crystallography A32: 751-767.

11. Subramanian, M.A., Aravamudan, G. & Subba Rao, G.V. 1983. Oxide pyrochlores — a review. Progressive Solid State Chemistry 15: 55-143.

12. Valant, M. & Davies, P.K. 2000. Crystal chemistry and dielectric properties of chemically substituted (Bi1.5Zn1.0Nb1.5)O7 and Bi2(Zn2/3Nb4/3)O7 pyrochlores. Journal of the American Ceramic Society 83: 147-153.

13. Wang, H., Du, H.L. & Yao, X. 2003. Structural study of Bi2O3-ZnO-Nb2O5 based pyrochlores. Materials Science and Engineering B99: 20-24.

14. Youn, H.J., Sogabe, T., Randall, C.A., Shrout, T.R. & Lanagan, M.T. 2001. Phase relations and dielectric properties in the Bi2O3 -ZnO-Ta2O5 system. Journal of the American Ceramic Society 84: 2557-2561.

15. Youn, H.J., Randall, C., Chen, A., Shrout, T. & Lanagan, M.T. 2002. Dielectric relaxation and microwave dielectric properties of Bi2O3 -ZnO-Ta2O5 ceramics. Journal of Material Research 17: 1502-1506.

Repository Staff Only: item control page