Preparation of solid ceramic electrolytes from stabilized zirconia with calcia
Instrumentation and automation of a furnace adapted to flash sintering
Development of ceramic-metal composite materials for use as anode in solid oxide f...
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Author(s): |
Rafael Morgado Batista
Total Authors: 1
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Document type: | Master's Dissertation |
Press: | São Paulo. |
Institution: | Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Pesquisas Energéticas e Nucleares (IPEN/BT) |
Defense date: | 2010-02-24 |
Examining board members: |
Eliana Navarro dos Santos Muccillo;
Fabio Coral Fonseca;
José Fernando Queiruga Rey
|
Advisor: | Eliana Navarro dos Santos Muccillo |
Abstract | |
The effects produced by NiO addition to yttria fully-stabilized zirconia were systematically investigated. Commercial zirconia-8 mol% yttria, nickel acetate, nitrate, trihydroxicarbonate and nickel oxide were used as starting materials. The NiO content varied from 0.5 to 5 mol%, and the compositions were prepared by mechanically mixing the starting materials in the stoichiometric proportions. Densification studies carried out by density and dilatometry measurements revealed that the maximum shrinkage (~16-~20%) depends on the type of nickel precursor. In the second sintering stage the linear shrinkage increased with increasing NiO content (precursor: nickel trihydroxi-carbonate). In the first sintering stage, the activation energy for grain boundary diffusion changed according to the additive precursor, being lower for the oxide and higher for the trihydroxi-carbonate. In the second stage, when the major part of porosity is eliminated, the maximum shrinkage rate temperatures were found to be independent on the precursor except when nickel acetate is used. The solubility limit at 1350ºC is 1.48% as determined by X-ray diffraction. Above the solubility limit the excess NiO is retained as a second randomly distributed phase. The main effect of the additive in the ceramic microstructure is to increase the average grain size. The electrical measurements showed that the additive did not produce any significant effect in the grain conductivity irrespective of the sintering time, except when the precursor material was nickel oxide. In this case, the grain conductivity increased with increasing sintering time. This effect is attributed to the crystallite size of the nickel oxide precursor, which is higher than that of 8YSZ, slowing down the formation of solid solution. However, the grain conductivity of samples prepared with nickel trihydroxi-carbonate precursor is slightly lower than those of other samples. The samples sintered for 15 h exhibited an additional semicircle in the impedance diagram, which is assigned to the tetragonal phase of zirconia-yttria, resulting from thermal decomposition of the cubic structure. Hence, NiO additive accelerates the kinetics of cubic-to-tetragonal phase transformation in 8YSZ. The grain boundary conductivity depends on the sintering time due to reduction of the fraction of interfaces as a consequence of grain growth. The microscopic grain boundary conductivity of 8YSZ does not vary with NiO addition. (AU) |