Dislocation‐tuned electrical conductivity in solid electrolytes (9YSZ): A micro‐mechanical approach

Author:

Muhammad Qaisar Khushi1ORCID,Valderrama Marcela1,Yue Mengkun23,Opitz Alexander Karl4,Taibl Stefanie4,Siebenhofer Matthäus4,Bruder Enrico5,Fleig Jürgen4,Fang Xufei1ORCID,Frömling Till1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Nonmetallic‐Inorganic Materials Department of Materials and Earth Sciences Technical University of Darmstadt Darmstadt Germany

2. AML Department of Engineering Mechanics Tsinghua University Beijing P. R. China

3. Center for Flexible Electronics Technology Tsinghua University Beijing P. R. China

4. Christian‐Doppler‐Laboratory for Ferroic Materials Institute of Chemical Technologies and Analytics Vienna University of Technology Vienna Austria

5. Division of Physical Metallurgy Department of Materials and Earth Sciences Technical University of Darmstadt Darmstadt Germany

Abstract

AbstractTailoring the electrical conductivity of functional ceramics by introducing dislocations is a comparatively recent research focus, and its merits were demonstrated through mechanical means. Especially bulk deformation at high temperatures is suggested to be a promising method to introduce a high dislocation density. So far, however, controlling dislocation generation and their annihilation remains difficult. Although deforming ceramics generate dislocations on multiple length scales, dislocation annihilation at the same time appears to be the bottleneck to use the full potential of dislocations‐tailoring the electrical conductivity. Here, we demonstrate the control over these aspects using a micromechanical approach on yttria‐stabilized zirconia ‐ YSZ. Targeted indentation well below the dislocation annihilation temperature resulted in extremely dense dislocation networks, visualized by chemical etching and electron channeling contrast imaging. Microcontact‐impedance measurements helped evaluate the electrical response of operating individual slip systems. A significant conductivity enhancement is revealed in dislocation‐rich regions compared to pristine ones in fully stabilized YSZ. This enhancement is mainly attributed to oxygen ionic conductivity. Thus, the possibility of increasing the conductivity is illustrated and provides a prospect to transfer the merits of dislocation‐tuned electrical conductivity to solid oxygen electrolytes.

Funder

Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Ceramics and Composites

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