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In Situ Observations of Templated Grain Growth in ( Na 0.5 K 0.5 ) 0.98 Li 0.02 NbO 3 Piezoceramics: Texture Development and Template–Matrix Interactions
Author(s) -
Tutuncu Goknur,
Chang Yunfei,
Poterala Stephen,
Messing Gary L.,
Jones Jacob L.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of the american ceramic society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.9
H-Index - 196
eISSN - 1551-2916
pISSN - 0002-7820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1551-2916.2012.05268.x
Subject(s) - nucleation , texture (cosmology) , natural bond orbital , crystallography , in situ , grain growth , materials science , phase (matter) , template , matrix (chemical analysis) , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , microstructure , nanotechnology , density functional theory , composite material , chromatography , computer science , image (mathematics) , organic chemistry , artificial intelligence , computational chemistry
Nucleation, texture development, and phase equilibria were observed during templated grain growth ( TGG ) of ( Na 0.5 K 0.5 ) 0.98 Li 0.02 NbO 3 ( NKLN ) via in situ X‐ray diffraction ( XRD ). Initially, Na NbO 3 templates and NKLN matrix powder exist as distinct phases with unique lattice parameters. Above 850°C, the templates and matrix begin to react via interdiffusion as characterized by an increase in diffuse scattering between the Na NbO 3 and NKLN peaks. This process intensifies immediately prior to template growth, leading to merging of diffraction peaks for these two phases. TGG in this system is thus homoepitaxial in nature as it occurs after the NKLN matrix and Na NbO 3 templates form a solid solution. The degree of alignment in the matrix phase is quantified in situ using the March–Dollase parameters r and f . The degree of orientation of the textured NKLN mirrors the initial alignment of the template particles ( r  ≈ 0.3), while the texture fraction f increases from 0.04 to ~0.67 after 3 h at 1138°C. This increase in texture fraction follows n  = 1/3 power law kinetics consistent with liquid‐phase‐assisted normal grain growth on plate‐like templates. As the observed template–matrix interdiffusion and the onset of texture development proceed extremely rapidly, this work demonstrates the utility of in situ XRD for observing details of TGG that cannot easily be seen via ex situ methods.

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