Ionic-to-electronic conductivity of glasses in the P2O5-V2O5-ZnO-Li2O system

. Glasses having a composition 15V 2 O 5 -5ZnO-(80- x P 2 O 5 - x Li 2 O ( x = 5 , 10, 15 mol%) were prepared by the conventional melt quenching. Conduction and relaxation mechanisms in these glasses were studied using impedance spectroscopy in a frequency range from 10 Hz to 10 MHz and in a tempera...

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Veröffentlicht in:European physical journal plus 2016-12, Vol.131 (12), p.421, Article 421
Hauptverfasser: Langar, A., Sdiri, N., Elhouichet, H., Ferid, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:. Glasses having a composition 15V 2 O 5 -5ZnO-(80- x P 2 O 5 - x Li 2 O ( x = 5 , 10, 15 mol%) were prepared by the conventional melt quenching. Conduction and relaxation mechanisms in these glasses were studied using impedance spectroscopy in a frequency range from 10 Hz to 10 MHz and in a temperature range from 513 K to 566 K. The structure of the amorphous synthetic product was corroborated by X-ray diffraction (disappearance of nacrite peaks). The DC conductivity follows the Arrhenius law and the activation energy determined by regression analysis varies with the content of Li 2 O. Frequency-dependent AC conductivity was analyzed by Jonscher's universal power law, which is varying as ω n , and the temperature-dependent power parameter supported by the Correlated Barrier Hopping (CBH) model. For x = 15 mol%, the values of n ≤ 0 . 5 confirm the dominance of ionic conductivity. The analysis of the modulus formalism with a distribution of relaxation times was carried out using the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts (KWW) stretched exponential function. The stretching exponent, β , is dependent on temperature. The analysis of the temperature variation of the M” peak indicates that the relaxation process is thermally activated. Modulus study reveals the temperature-dependent non-Debye-type relaxation phenomenon.
ISSN:2190-5444
2190-5444
DOI:10.1140/epjp/i2016-16421-y