Influence of Thermally Induced Oxygen Order on Mobile Ion Dynamics on Gd2(Ti0.65Zr0.35)2O7

K.J. Moreno; A.F. Fuentes; J. Hanuza; M. Maczka; U. Amador; J. Santamaría; C. León. Influence of Thermally Induced Oxygen Order on Mobile Ion Dynamics on Gd2(Ti0.65Zr0.35)2O7. Physical Review B (ISSN: 1098-0121). 2007, Vol. 75, p. 184303-1-2007.

We report on the influence of oxygen order in the oxygen ion dynamics in the ionic conductor Gd2(Ti0.65Zr0.35)2O7. The metastable Gd2(Ti0.65Zr0.35)2O7 powders prepared by mechanical milling present an anion deficient fluorite-type of structure, stable up to about 800°C. Thermal treatments at higher temperatures facilitate the gradual rearrangement of the cation and anion substructures and the relaxation of mechanochemically induced defects. Interestingly, metastable pyrochlores showing a very unusual cation distribution were observed during the thermally induced defect-recovery process. We have found that the ionic conductivity due to mobile oxygen ions increases significantly with increasing sintering temperature from 800 to 1500 ºC as a result of a systematic decrease in the activation energy for the dc conductivity from 1.23 to 0.78 eV. Electrical conductivity relaxation is well described by stretched exponentials of the form , and the fractional exponent n decreases systematically from n=0.51 to 0.18 with increasing sintering temperature. These results are explained in terms of weaker ion-ion interactions in the increasingly ordered structure of the samples sintered at higher temperatures, and point to the importance of structural disorder in determining the dynamics of mobile oxygen ions.