Published June 4, 2008 | Version v1
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Shrinkage mechanism and phase evolution of fine-grain BaTiO3 powder compacts containing 10 mol% BaGeO3 prepared via a precursor route

Description

The shrinkage mechanism of BaTiO3 powder compacts containing 10 mol%
BaGeO3, synthesized by a precursor route and a conventional mixed-oxide method, are
described herein. The calcination of a barium titanium germanium 1,2-ethanediolato complex
precursor - [Ba(HOC2H4OH)4][Ti0.9Ge0.1(OC2H4O)3] (1) - at 730 °C leads to a nm-sized
Ba(Ti0.9/Ge0.1)O3 powder (1a) (SBET = 16.9 m2/g) consisting of BaTiO3 and BaGeO3. Whereas
the conventional mixed-oxide method yields a powder (2) with a specific surface area of SBET
= 2.0 m2/g. Powder compacts of 1a start to shrink at 790 °C and the shrinkage rate reaches a
maximum at 908 °C. Dense ceramic bodies can be obtained below the appearance of the
liquid melt (1120 °C), therefore the shrinkage of 1a can be described by a solid-state sintering
mechanism. Otherwise the beginning of the shrinkage of powder 2 is shifted to higher
temperatures and the formation of the liquid melt is necessary to obtain dense Isothermal dilatometric investigations indicate that the initial stage of sintering is dominated by sliding processes. XRD investigations show that below a sintering temperature of 1200 °C
ceramic bodies of 1a consist of tetragonal BaTiO3 and hexagonal BaGeO3, whereas
temperatures above 1200 °C lead to ceramics containing orthorhombic BaGeO3, and a
temperature of 1350 °C causes the formation of a Ba2TiGe2O8 phase. The phase evolution of
ceramic bodies of 2 is similar to 1a, however a Ba2GeO4 phase is observed below a
temperature of 1100 °C.ceramic bodies.

 

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