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Trapping of different stages of BaTiO 3 reduction with LiH.

Hua GuoAleksander JaworskiZili MaAdam SlabonZoltan BacsikReji NedumkandathilUlrich Häussermann
Published in: RSC advances (2020)
We investigated the hydride reduction of tetragonal BaTiO 3 using LiH. The reactions employed molar H : BaTiO 3 ratios of 1.2, 3, and 10 and variable temperatures up to 700 °C. The air-stable reduced products were characterized by powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), scanning electron microscopy, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), X-ray fluorescence (XRF), and 1 H magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR spectroscopy. Effective reduction, as indicated by the formation of dark blue to black colored, cubic-phased, products was observed at temperatures as low as 300 °C. The product obtained at 300 °C corresponded to oxyhydride BaTiO ∼2.9 H ∼0.1 , whereas reduction at higher temperatures resulted in simultaneous O defect formation, BaTiO 2.9- x H 0.1 □ x , and eventually - at temperatures above 450 °C - to samples void of hydridic H. Concomitantly, the particles of samples reduced at high temperatures (500-600 °C) display substantial surface alteration, which is interpreted as the formation of a TiO x (OH) y shell, and sintering. Diffuse reflectance UV-VIS spectroscopy shows broad absorption in the VIS-NIR region, which is indicative of the presence of n-type free charge carriers. The size of the intrinsic band gap (∼3.2 eV) appears only slightly altered. Mott-Schottky measurements confirm the n-type conductivity and reveal shifts of the conduction band edge in the LiH reduced samples. Thus LiH appears as a versatile reagent to produce various distinct forms of reduced BaTiO 3 with tailored electronic properties.
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