| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10625549 | Ceramics International | 2013 | 6 Pages | 
Abstract
												Bismuth titanate templates (Bi4Ti3O12) were synthesized by the molten salt method in Na2SO4 and K2SO4 fluxes, using an amorphous Bi4Ti3O12 precursor and a mechanically mixed Bi2O3+TiO2 mixture as the starting materials. The templates were characterized by means of X-Ray Diffraction, FT-IR, FT-Raman, FEG-SEM and TEM. The templates are free of secondary phases and present orthorhombic structure with orientation in the c-plane. FT-IR suggests no traces of sulfate groups revealing that the molten salt synthesis was beneficial for elimination of inorganic species and for the arrangement of individual nanocrystals into ordered lattices. FEG-SEM analyses of BIT templates revealed that most of the grains were homogeneous with a length of 3.1 µm and a width of 0.3 µm and had plate-like morphology. TEM investigations show that the c-axis of the perovskite units is parallel to the thickness direction of the grains and no liquid-phase was formed during BIT phase formation.
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											Authors
												M.G.A. Ranieri, E.C. Aguiar, M. Cilense, A.Z. Simões, J.A Varela, 
											