Abstract

The B-site tailored YIn(1-x)Fe(x)O3 (0.0≤ x≤ 1.0) series was synthesized by glycine-aided gel-combustion technique and subjected to extensive structural and electrical investigations. The temperature had tremendous bearing on the phase evolution exhibited by the system. The entire system crystallized as C-type metastable polymorph in the as-synthesized form. Hexagonal polymorphs of Fe(3+)-rich compositions could be isolated by controlled heat treatment at 750 °C. Raman spectroscopic investigations showed that, while there is a general shrinkage of the lattice due to substitution of a smaller ion at In(3+)-site, there is an apparent dilation of the Y-O bond, and this anomaly reflects in the electrical behavior exhibited by the system. The single-phasic hexagonal nominal compositions, YIn(1-x)Fe(x)O3 (0.0 ≤ x ≤ 0.3), were also studied by impedance spectroscopy. The dielectric constant was found to drastically increase from 10 for YInO3 to 1000 for YIn(0.7)Fe(0.3)O3 at room temperature stressing the role of B-site tailoring on electrical behavior. More interestingly, careful substitution of Fe into YInO3 could tune the electrical behavior from a dielectric to relaxor ferroelectric in the temperature range studied. The nominal composition YIn(0.7)Fe(0.3)O3 showed a classical relaxor ferroelectric like behavior which is an important observation in context of the search for new lead free relaxor materials.

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