Abstract :
It has been reported that fluorine ions (F-) can substitute for oxygen ions (O2-) in small amounts in barium titanate and act as electron donors. While fluorine is not usually an impurity in barium titanate, this work suggests that ions such as Cl- or (OH)-, that can be impurities, might behave similarly to F-. Cl- ions can be present in barium titanate made using barium chloride and/or titanium chloride, as in the oxalate process. Hydroxyl ions are common in barium titanate made by the hydrothermal or alkoxide processes. Other common impurities in barium titanate, such as Mg2+, Al3+, Fe3+, or Na+, are believed to behave as electron acceptors and induce "extrinsic" oxygen vacancies in the Ba2+Ti4+O3 crystal structure for charge balance. Acceptor impurities are minimized in the manufacture of barium titanate because the presence of oxygen vacancies can degrade the reliability of multilayer ceramic capacitors (MLC\´s) when the barium titanate is used in thin dielectric layers with Ni electrodes. In this paper we consider the possibility that anion donors, particularly (OH)-, might counteract the effect of minor levels of acceptor impurities and have a beneficial effect on the performance of MLC\´s with Ni electrodes and thin dielectric layers.
Keywords :
barium compounds; crystal structure; ferroelectric thin films; impurities; impurity states; vacancies (crystal); BaTiO3; acceptor impurities; alkoxide processes; anion donors; anion impurities; dielectric layers; electron acceptors; hydrothermal processes; multilayer ceramic capacitors; oxygen vacancies; thin dielectric layers; Barium; Degradation; Dielectrics; Electrodes; Electrons; Impurities; Iron; Manufacturing; Nonhomogeneous media; Titanium compounds; MLC´s; barium titanate; donors; hydroxyls; reliability;