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Thermal conductivity of single crystals zirconia stabilized by scandium, yttrium, gadolinium, and ytterbium oxides

Authors :
Dmitrii A. Agarkov
Mikhail A. Borik
Galina M. Korableva
Aleksej V. Kulebyakin
Elena E. Lomonova
Filipp O. Milovich
Valentina A. Myzina
Pavel A. Popov
Nataliya Yu. Tabachkova
Source :
Modern Electronic Materials 8(1): 1-6
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Pensoft Publishers, 2022.

Abstract

The phase composition and heat conductivity of (ZrO2)0.9(R2O3)0.1 solid solution single crystals have been studied, where R = (Gd, Yb, Sc, Y), (ZrO2)0.9(Sc2O3)0.09(Gd2O3)0.01 and (ZrO2)0.9(Sc2O3)0.09(Yb2O3)0.01. Single crystals have been grown by directional melt crystallization in a cold skull. The phase composition of the crystals has been studied using X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. The heat conductivity of the crystals has been studied using the absolute steady-state technique of longitudinal heat flow in the 50–300 K range. We show that at a total stabilizing oxide concentration of 10 mol.% the phase composition of the crystals depends on the ionic radius of the stabilizing cation. The (ZrO2)0.9(Sc2O3)0.1 crystals have the lowest heat conductivity in the 50–300 K range while the (ZrO2)0.9(Gd2O3)0.1 solid solutions have the lowest heat conductivity at 300 K. Analysis of the experimental data suggests that the heat conductivity of the crystals depends mainly on the phase composition and ionic radius of the stabilizing cation. Phonon scattering caused by the difference in the weight of the co-doping oxide cation has a smaller effect on the heat conductivity.

Details

ISSN :
24521779 and 24522449
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Modern Electronic Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89f3e2bc7845258db16e8db35e53947e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3897/j.moem.8.1.85242