Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1611257 Journal of Alloys and Compounds 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Electrical conductivity and thermal expansion of strontium vanadates are measured.•Conductivity of SrVO3−δ is 106–108 times higher compared to Sr2V2O7 and Sr3V2O8.•Sr2V2O7 transforms on reduction to SrVO3−δ via (5Sr3V2O8 + SrV6O11) intermediate.•This process is kinetically stagnated due to good redox stability of Sr3V2O8.•Large volume changes on Sr2V2O7 ↔ SrVO3 transformation are confirmed by dilatometry.

The reversibility of redox-induced phase transformations and accompanying electrical conductivity and dimensional changes in perovskite-type SrVO3−δ, a parent material for a family of potential solid oxide fuel cell anode materials, were evaluated employing X-ray diffraction, thermal analysis, dilatometry and electrical measurements. At 873–1273 K, the electrical conductivity of SrVO3−δ is metallic-like and 6–8 orders of magnitude higher compared to semiconducting V5+-based strontium pyrovanadate Sr2V2O7 and strontium orthovanadate Sr3V2O8 existing under oxidizing conditions. SrVO3−δ is easily oxidized to a pyrovanadate phase at atmospheric oxygen pressure. Inverse reduction in 10%H2–90%N2 atmosphere occurs in two steps through (5Sr3V2O8 + SrV6O11) intermediate. As Sr3V2O8 is relatively stable even under reducing conditions, the perovskite phase and its high level of electrical conductivity cannot be recovered completely in a reasonable time span at temperatures ⩽1273 K. Dilatometric studies confirmed that SrVO3 ↔ Sr2V2O7 redox transformation is accompanied with significant dimensional changes. Their extent depends on the degree of phase conversion and, apparently, on microstructural features.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Metals and Alloys
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