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Temperature dependent conductivity and broadband dielectric response of precursor-derived Nb<inf>2</inf>O<inf>5</inf>
Date Issued
01-05-2020
Author(s)
Nanda, Gokul
Awin, Eranezhuth Wasan
Gasyak, Tatiana
Koroleva, Ekaterina
Filimonov, Alexey
Vakhrushev, Sergey
Sujith, Ravindran
Indian Institute of Technology, Madras
Abstract
Different polymorphs of niobium pentoxide (Nb2O5) were synthesized using niobium ethoxide as a precursor by varying the pyrolyzing temperature. The room temperature X-ray diffractograms revealed the irreversible phase evolution from amorphous to pseudohexagonal (823 K) to orthorhombic (1023 K) and to monoclinic crystal structure (1223 K). While phase evolution was also confirmed by thermogravimetry and dilatometry, Raman spectroscopy clearly suggested complete elimination of free carbon in the pyrolysed ceramics. The sintering conditions were optimized to produce a highly dense (>95%) thermodynamically stable monoclinic Nb2O5. The electrical properties of stable monoclinic Nb2O5 sample were thoroughly studied. The monoclinic Nb2O5 was found to have a dielectric constant of around 28 with a dielectric loss of 0.008 at room temperature and at 100 kHz. At low measurement frequencies, an anomalous increase in the effective dielectric permittivity with increasing temperature was observed. Large values of the ε’ are associated with polarization due to the accumulation of free electrons at the grain boundaries. An analysis of the dispersion curves of Nb2O5 revealed that two relaxation processes are responsible for the observed anomalies, and the temperature dependencies of their parameters (dielectric strength, relaxation time and spectrum broadening parameter) were determined. The low-frequency process (relaxation time τ0 ~ 0.45 s), which makes the largest contribution to the dielectric constant, was apparently due to the inhomogeneous conductivity of ceramics. It was revealed that the DC conductivity of ceramics has thermoactivation character with activation energy of about 660 meV and was determined by the oxygen vacancies.
Volume
46