Abstract

An understanding of high-temperature aging effects on the electrical properties of electrolytes is very important in selecting optimum compositions for practical applications. The aging behavior and mechanisms of doped zirconia ceramics have been extensively studied. However, little information is available regarding the aging behavior of ceria-based electrolytes. The present study has demonstrated that a high-temperature aging at 1000 °C has a significant effect on the ionic conductivity of the Y- or Gd-doped ceria (Ce 1− x Y x O 2− δ and Ce 1− x Gd x O 2− δ ), especially in the case of the Gd doping. The aging behavior is characterized by a critical dopant concentration, above which the aging has a detrimental effect on the conductivity of the doped ceria ceramics. The aging behavior in the doped ceria cannot be explained using the aging mechanisms applied to the doped zirconia. Instead, the formation of the microdomains in the doped ceria has been acknowledged to be the main contribution to the aging behavior of the Y- or Gd-doped ceria ceramics. The formation ability of microdomains has been estimated to be in the order of La 3+>Gd 3+>Y 3+, based on the degree of size mismatch between the dopant ion and Ce 4+ ion. The critical dopant concentrations at which the microdomains start to form for La 3+, Gd 3+ and Y 3+ in the doped ceria ceramics are x=∼0.15, ∼0.2 and ∼0.25, respectively. This critical dopant concentration is also an important indication: below which the conductivity is governed by only the association enthalpy, and above which the conductivity is dominated mainly by the microdomains rather than the association enthalpy.

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