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Published July 14, 2009 | public
Journal Article

High Total Proton Conductivity in Large-Grained Yttrium-Doped Barium Zirconate

Abstract

Barium zirconate has attracted particular attention among candidate proton conducting electrolyte materials for fuel cells and other electrochemical applications because of its chemical stability, mechanical robustness, and high bulk proton conductivity. Development of electrochemical devices based on this material, however, has been hampered by the high resistance of grain boundaries, and, due to limited grain growth during sintering, the high number density of such boundaries. Here, we demonstrate a fabrication protocol based on the sol−gel synthesis of nanocrystalline precursor materials and reactive sintering that results in large-grained, polycrystalline BaZr_(0.8)Y_(0.2O3−δ) of total high conductivity, 1 × 10^(−2) Scm^(−1) at 450 °C. The detrimental role of grain boundaries in these materials is confirmed via a comparison of the conductivities of polycrystalline samples with different grain sizes. Specifically, two samples with grain sizes differing by a factor of 2.3 display essentially identical grain interior conductivities, whereas the total grain boundary conductivities differ by a factor of 2.5−3.2, depending on the temperature (with the larger-grained material displaying higher conductivity).

Additional Information

Copyright © 2009 American Chemical Society. Received January 22, 2009. Revised Manuscript Received April 8, 2009. Publication Date (Web): May 20, 2009. This work was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and by JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowships for Research Abroad. Note Added After ASAP Publication: Due to a production error, the footnote for Table 1 was in inadvertently deleted from the article in the version of this paper published ASAP May 20, 2009; the corrected version published ASAP June 12, 2009.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023