Abstract

Herein, a spectrum of electric field–induced microstructural evolution phenomena are observed in polycrystalline Bi2O3‐doped ZnO, and the underlying mechanisms are revealed. An applied electric field can drive the migration of bismuth (Bi) toward the negative electrode (including the motion of the charge‐neutral Bi‐rich liquid phase via electrochemical coupling), which produces a Bi‐free zone near the anode. The field‐induced migration of Bi creates a junction between electron‐conducting ZnO and ion‐conducting Bi2O3‐doped ZnO (via Bi2O3‐enriched liquid‐like intergranular films [IGFs]), where an oxygen ion current is converted to an electron current while generating O2 gas, generating a porosity belt. Aberration‐corrected electron microscopy further reveals the formation of three distinct types of grain boundaries (GBs). “Clean” ZnO GBs are observed near the anode, where Bi is depleted by the electric field. Bi2O3‐enriched liquid‐like IGFs (disordered GBs) are observed in the middle section. Near the cathode, electrochemical reduction induces an GB disorder–order transition to form fast‐moving Bi2O3‐enriched ordered GBs, which causes abnormal grain growth. Herein, several new field–matter interaction phenomena are discovered and an exemplar of field effects on microstructural evolution are established at multiple length scales in the presence of GB complexion (phase‐like) transitions.

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