Strontium Superstoichiometry and Defect Structure of SrCeO3 Perovskite
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2008
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ACS
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Mather, Glenn C., et al. «Strontium Superstoichiometry and Defect Structure of SrCeO 3 Perovskite». Inorganic Chemistry, vol. 47, n.o 3, febrero de 2008, pp. 921-29. https://doi.org/10.1021/ic701703c.
Abstract
Strontium cerate (SrCeO3) is the parent phase of a family of prototype proton-conducting perovskites with important potential applications as electrolytes in protonic ceramic fuel cells, hydrogen-separation membranes, and sensors for hydrogen and humidity. Apparent nonstoichiometric behavior and the microstructure of SrCeO3 have been investigated. Phase analysis by X-ray diffraction indicates that single-phase material in the system Sr1+xCeO3+d is obtained for compositions x = 0.02-0.03 and that nominally stoichiometric SrCeO3 (x= 0) synthesized by either solid-state reaction or the citrate method is Sr-rich. Selected area electron diffraction confirms that the system crystallizes with the GdFeO3-type orthorhombic perovskite structure (space group Pnma). Structural defects characterized by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy include twin domain boundaries and SrO-rich, Ruddlesden-Popper-type planar defects. Magnetic susceptibility measurements down to 2 K indicate that the Ce3+ content is minor (0.01 mol per formula unit for slow-cooled material) and does not influence the observed nonstoichiometry.