Author/Authors :
Nowick، نويسنده , , Arthur S، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In order to better understand the dielectric behavior known as NCL (‘nearly constant loss’) which occurs for complex materials, e.g. glasses and highly doped crystals, at low temperatures and/or high frequencies, we examine various dilute crystalline materials in the same temperature/frequency range. These include Gd3+ and Y3+-doped CeO2 and Al3+ doped CaTiO3, both of which are oxygen-ion conductors, and Nd3+ doped BaCeO3, which is a proton conductor. In all cases, one or more discrete dielectric loss peaks are observed, all with low activation energies (∼0.2 eV). For each of the oxygen-ion conductors, we find peak broadening with increasing concentration, eventually smearing out into true NCL behavior. In the case of the BaCeO3 treated in H2O vapor, a peak appears which shows non-Arrhenius behavior, strongly suggestive of proton tunneling. These various relaxation peaks are due to collective motions of relatively large ionic configurations that have gone off-symmetry, involving small displacements and low activation barriers. The fact that such relaxations are so prevalent suggests the need for a wider use of low-temperature dielectric spectroscopy.