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Co-doping effects of (Al,Ti, Mg) on the microstructure and electrical behavior of ZnO-based ceramics
Authors:Qianying Sun  Guorong Li  Tian Tian  Jiangtao Zeng  Kunyu Zhao  Liaoying Zheng  Maud Barré  Jens Dittmer  Francois Gouttenoire  Anthony Rousseau  Abdel Hadi Kassiba
Affiliation:1. Key Laboratory of Inorganic Functional Material and Device, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China;2. Key Laboratory of Inorganic Functional Material and Device, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China

Center of Materials Science and Optoelectronics Engineering, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China;3. Institute of Molecules and Materials of Le Mans (IMMM) – UMR-CNRS 6283, Le Mans Université, Le Mans, France

Abstract:Co-doped ZnO-based ceramics using Al, Ti, and Mg ions in different ratios were synthesized with the objective to investigate the doping effects on the crystalline features, microstructure and the electrical behavior. For Al and Ti doping, a coexistence of crystalline phases was shown with a major wurtzite ZnO structure and secondary spinel phases (ZnAl2O4, Zn2TiO4, or ZnaTibAlcOd), while Mg doping did not alter significantly the structural features of the wurtzite ZnO phase. The electrical behavior induced by Al, Ti, and Mg co-doping in different ratios was investigated using Raman, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and 27Al and 67Zn solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Al doping induces a high electrical conductivity compared to other doping elements. In particular, shallow donors from Zni-AlZn defect structures are inferred from the characteristic NMR signal at about 185 ppm; that is, quite far from the usual oxygen coordinated Al. The Knight shift effect emanating from a highly conducting Al-doped ZnO ceramics was considered as the origin of this observation. Oppositely, as Ti doping leads to the formation of secondary spinel phases, EPR analysis shows a high concentration of Ti3+ ions which limit the electrical conductivity. The correlation between the structural features at the local order, the involved defects and the electrical behavior as function of the doping process are discussed.
Keywords:conducting ceramics  doping effects  ZnO
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