Abstract
AbstractRare earth oxides are important materials due to their chemical and physical properties. The rare earth sesquioxides (RESOXs) possess a cubic, monoclinic, or hexagonal structure, depending on pressure, temperature and ionic radius. When RESOXs take the form of single crystalline grains with diameter in the nanoscale range (nanocrystals), it is suspected that the grain size determines the phase stability as well. RESOXs with medium ionic radius such as Gd2O3, Eu2O3 and Sm2O3 in the low temperature range up to 900°C may take the monoclinic structure or the cubic structure, depending on the synthesis process. The structure determining factor can be, besides temperature, also the grain size. In order to determine the stable structure taking into account grain size as a parameter, we produced Gd2O3 and Sm2O3 nanocrystals embedded in a neutral MgO matrix. This way, we prevented grain growth during annealing. For comparison, we annealed pure Gd2O3 and Sm2O3 nanocrystals in which temperature increase caused grain growth, as in traditional experiments for phase stability determination. We have shown that for coarse grained materials at low temperature monoclinic is the stable structure. For nano‐sized crystallites, cubic is the stable structure. This explains the controversial results as far as which phase is the stable one below 900°C and permits to program the needed structure by controlling crystallization kinetics and grain growth.
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