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Phase Control in Hafnia: New Synthesis Approach and Convergence of Average and Local Structure Properties
Author(s) -
Bogdan Cojocaru,
Daniel Avram,
Raluca Negrea,
Corneliu Ghica,
Vadim G. Kessler,
Gulaim A. Seisenbaeva,
Vasile I. Pârvulescu,
Carmen Tiseanu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b00580
Subject(s) - tetragonal crystal system , hafnia , lanthanide , materials science , luminescence , coprecipitation , raman spectroscopy , doping , calcination , nanoparticle , phase (matter) , crystal structure , analytical chemistry (journal) , crystallography , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , inorganic chemistry , chemistry , ion , optics , optoelectronics , composite material , physics , organic chemistry , cubic zirconia , ceramic , catalysis , engineering
Technologically relevant tetragonal/cubic phases of HfO 2 can be stabilized at room temperature by doping with trivalent rare earths using various approaches denoted generically as bulk coprecipitation. Using in situ/ex situ X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman spectroscopy, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and in situ/ex situ site-selective, time-gated luminescence spectroscopy, we show that wet impregnation of hafnia nanoparticles with 10% Eu oxide followed by mild calcination in air at 500 °C produces an efficient stabilization of the cubic phase, comparable to that obtained by bulk precipitation. The physical reasons behind the apparently conflictual data concerning the actual crystallographic phase and the local symmetry around the Eu stabilizer and how these can be mediated by luminescence analysis are also discussed. Apparently, the cubic crystal structure symmetry determined by XRD results in a pseudocubic/tetragonal local structure around Eu determined by luminescence. Considering the recent findings on wet impregnated CeO 2 and ZrO 2 , it is concluded that CeO 2 , ZrO 2 , and HfO 2 represent a unique case of a family of oxides that is extremely tolerant to heavy doping by wet impregnation. In this way, the same batch of preformed nanoparticles can be doped with different lanthanide concentrations or with various lanthanides at a fixed concentration, allowing a systematic and reliable investigation of the effect of doping, lanthanide type, and lanthanide concentration on the various functionalities of these technologically relevant oxides.

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