Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1476245 Journal of the European Ceramic Society 2010 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Nanocrystalline zinc titanate (ZnTiO3) thin films and powders with purity of 94% were produced at the low sintering temperature of 500 °C and the short sintering time of 1 h by a straightforward aqueous particulate sol–gel route. The effect of Zn:Ti molar ratio was studied on the crystallisation behaviour of zinc titanates. The prepared sols showed a narrow particle size distribution in the range 17–19 nm. X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) revealed that the powders contained mixtures of the rhombohedral-ZnTiO3, cubic-ZnO, cubic-Zn2TiO4 phases, as well as the anatase-TiO2 and the rutile-TiO2 depending on the sintering temperature and Zn:Ti molar ratio. Moreover, it was found that Zn:Ti molar ratio and sintering temperature influence the preferable orientation growth of the zinc titanate, being on (2 1 1) planes for molar ratios of Zn:Ti = 25:75 and 50:50 and on (1 1¯ 0) planes for molar ratio of Zn:Ti = 75:25 at sintering temperature of 600 °C. Transmission electron microscope (TEM) images showed that the average crystallite size of the powders annealed at 400 °C was around 2 nm and a gradual increase occurred up to 8 nm by heat treatment at 1000 °C. The activation energy for crystal growth of nanocrystalline ZnTiO3 calculated in the range 07.86–14.79 kJ/mol. Field emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM) analysis revealed that the deposited thin films had mesoporous and nanocrystalline structure with the average grain size of 19–23 nm at 600 °C and 34–39 nm at 800 °C depending upon the Zn:Ti molar ratio.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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