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Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions

[Image: see text] The technologically important frequency range for the application of electrostrictors and piezoelectrics is tens of Hz to tens of kHz. Sm(3+)- and Gd(3+)-doped ceria ceramics, excellent intermediate-temperature ion conductors, have been shown to exhibit very large electrostriction...

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Autores principales: Varenik, Maxim, Nino, Juan Claudio, Wachtel, Ellen, Kim, Sangtae, Cohen, Sidney R., Lubomirsky, Igor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8288944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33886271
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c20810
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author Varenik, Maxim
Nino, Juan Claudio
Wachtel, Ellen
Kim, Sangtae
Cohen, Sidney R.
Lubomirsky, Igor
author_facet Varenik, Maxim
Nino, Juan Claudio
Wachtel, Ellen
Kim, Sangtae
Cohen, Sidney R.
Lubomirsky, Igor
author_sort Varenik, Maxim
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The technologically important frequency range for the application of electrostrictors and piezoelectrics is tens of Hz to tens of kHz. Sm(3+)- and Gd(3+)-doped ceria ceramics, excellent intermediate-temperature ion conductors, have been shown to exhibit very large electrostriction below 1 Hz. Why this is so is still not understood. While optimal design of ceria-based devices requires an in-depth understanding of their mechanical and electromechanical properties, systematic investigation of the influence of dopant size on frequency response is lacking. In this report, the mechanical and electromechanical properties of dense ceria ceramics doped with trivalent lanthanides (RE(0.1)Ce(0.9)O(1.95), RE = Lu, Yb, Er, Gd, Sm, and Nd) were investigated. Young’s, shear, and bulk moduli were obtained from ultrasound pulse echo measurements. Nanoindentation measurements revealed room-temperature creep in all samples as well as the dependence of Young’s modulus on the unloading rate. Both are evidence for viscoelastic behavior, in this case anelasticity. For all samples, within the frequency range f = 0.15–150 Hz and electric field E ≤ 0.7 MV/m, the longitudinal electrostriction strain coefficient (|M(33)|) was 10(2) to 10(4)-fold larger than expected for classical (Newnham) electrostrictors. However, electrostrictive strain in Er-, Gd-, Sm-, and Nd-doped ceramics exhibited marked frequency relaxation, with the Debye-type characteristic relaxation time τ ≤ 1 s, while for the smallest dopants—Lu and Yb—little change in electrostrictive strain was detected over the complete frequency range studied. We find that only the small, less-studied dopants continue to produce useable electrostrictive strain at the higher frequencies. We suggest that this striking difference in frequency response may be explained by postulating that introduction of a dopant induces two types of polarizable elastic dipoles and that the dopant size determines which of the two will be dominant.
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spelling pubmed-82889442021-07-20 Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions Varenik, Maxim Nino, Juan Claudio Wachtel, Ellen Kim, Sangtae Cohen, Sidney R. Lubomirsky, Igor ACS Appl Mater Interfaces [Image: see text] The technologically important frequency range for the application of electrostrictors and piezoelectrics is tens of Hz to tens of kHz. Sm(3+)- and Gd(3+)-doped ceria ceramics, excellent intermediate-temperature ion conductors, have been shown to exhibit very large electrostriction below 1 Hz. Why this is so is still not understood. While optimal design of ceria-based devices requires an in-depth understanding of their mechanical and electromechanical properties, systematic investigation of the influence of dopant size on frequency response is lacking. In this report, the mechanical and electromechanical properties of dense ceria ceramics doped with trivalent lanthanides (RE(0.1)Ce(0.9)O(1.95), RE = Lu, Yb, Er, Gd, Sm, and Nd) were investigated. Young’s, shear, and bulk moduli were obtained from ultrasound pulse echo measurements. Nanoindentation measurements revealed room-temperature creep in all samples as well as the dependence of Young’s modulus on the unloading rate. Both are evidence for viscoelastic behavior, in this case anelasticity. For all samples, within the frequency range f = 0.15–150 Hz and electric field E ≤ 0.7 MV/m, the longitudinal electrostriction strain coefficient (|M(33)|) was 10(2) to 10(4)-fold larger than expected for classical (Newnham) electrostrictors. However, electrostrictive strain in Er-, Gd-, Sm-, and Nd-doped ceramics exhibited marked frequency relaxation, with the Debye-type characteristic relaxation time τ ≤ 1 s, while for the smallest dopants—Lu and Yb—little change in electrostrictive strain was detected over the complete frequency range studied. We find that only the small, less-studied dopants continue to produce useable electrostrictive strain at the higher frequencies. We suggest that this striking difference in frequency response may be explained by postulating that introduction of a dopant induces two types of polarizable elastic dipoles and that the dopant size determines which of the two will be dominant. American Chemical Society 2021-04-22 2021-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8288944/ /pubmed/33886271 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c20810 Text en © 2021 American Chemical Society Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Varenik, Maxim
Nino, Juan Claudio
Wachtel, Ellen
Kim, Sangtae
Cohen, Sidney R.
Lubomirsky, Igor
Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions
title Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions
title_full Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions
title_fullStr Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions
title_full_unstemmed Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions
title_short Trivalent Dopant Size Influences Electrostrictive Strain in Ceria Solid Solutions
title_sort trivalent dopant size influences electrostrictive strain in ceria solid solutions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8288944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33886271
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c20810
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