| Literature DB >> 31963179 |
Xiaoyan Cui1, Tingjing Hu1, Huangyu Wu1, Junkai Zhang1, Lihua Yang1, Xin Zhong1, Xiaoxin Wu1, Jingshu Wang1, Xuefei Li1, Jinghai Yang1, Chunxiao Gao2.
Abstract
The charge carrier behavior and dielectric properties of BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals have been studied by alternating current (AC) impedance spectroscopy. The electron and ion coexist in the transport process. The F- ion's contribution to the total conduction increases with the doping concentration up to 4% and then decreases. Tb doping leads to the increase of defect quantities and a variation of charge carrier transport paths, which causes the increase of the ion diffusion coefficient and the decreases of bulk and grain boundary resistance. When the Tb-doped concentration is higher than 4%, the effect of deformation potential scattering variation on the transport property is dominant, which results in the decrease of the ion diffusion coefficient and increases of bulk and grain boundary resistance. The conduction properties of our BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals are compared with previous results that were found for the single crystals of rare earth-doped BaF2. Tb doping causes increases of both the quantity and the probability of carrier hopping, and it finally leads to increases of BaF2 nanocrystals' permittivity in the low frequency region.Entities:
Keywords: dielectric behavior; electrical properties; ion conduction; nanocrystals
Year: 2020 PMID: 31963179 PMCID: PMC7023190 DOI: 10.3390/nano10010155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1The XRD patterns of the BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals.
The lattice parameters that were yielded by refining the XRD pattern.
| Tb-Doped Concentration | Lattice Constant (Å) | Cell Volume (Å3) |
|---|---|---|
| 0% | 6.2025 | 238.619 |
| 2% | 6.1945 | 237.696 |
| 4% | 6.1883 | 236.991 |
| 6% | 6.1818 | 236.238 |
| 8% | 6.1700 | 234.887 |
| 10% | 6.1545 | 233.127 |
Figure 2The energy dispersive spectrometry (EDS) the spectra of BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals.
Figure 3The TEM image and size distribution histogram of the BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals.
Figure 4The complex impedance curves of the BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals. The inset is the equivalent circuit, R and C are the bulk resistance and capacitance, R and C are the grain boundary resistance and capacitance, and W is the Warburg element.
Figure 5Z′ vs. ω−1/2 in the low frequency region of the BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals.
Figure 6The transference number of the ion and the electron (a), the ion diffusion coefficient (b), and the bulk and grain boundary resistance (c) of the BaF2:Tb3+ nanocrystals.
Figure 7The frequency dependence of the real part (ε′) and imaginary part (ε″) of the permittivity.